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An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


Silicon Valley Tech Executive Nabbed in False Barcode Scheme Involving Lego Toys
From ACM News

Silicon Valley Tech Executive Nabbed in False Barcode Scheme Involving Lego Toys

Ever since smartphones got their own bar code scanners, it's become commonplace for store security officers—who carefully monitor surveillance cameras at big box...

From ACM News

In Cuba, Mystery Shrouds Fate of Internet Cable

It was all sunshine, smiles and celebratory speeches as officials marked the arrival of an undersea fiber-optic cable they promised would end Cuba's Internet isolation...

Mit Creates Amazing Ui From Levitating Orbs
From ACM TechNews

Mit Creates Amazing Ui From Levitating Orbs

Jinha Lee from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab's Tangible Media Group has been experimenting with developing a tactile user interface in which...

'Adaptive Radio': The Next Big Thing in Wireless?
From ACM News

'Adaptive Radio': The Next Big Thing in Wireless?

James Collier is loping in a broad circle on the Midsummer Common in Cambridge, England, holding aloft a two-foot fiberglass antenna.

Onstar Files Patents For Minority Report-Style Billboards
From ACM News

Onstar Files Patents For Minority Report-Style Billboards

Two weeks ago, a patent filing by General Motors was uncovered that proposed using data collected from its OnStar service to tailor public advertisements to individual...

5 Transformative Uses For Disney's Touch-Sensitive Technology
From ACM News

5 Transformative Uses For Disney's Touch-Sensitive Technology

Disney has a new technology, called Touche, that can turn any object, including the human body, into a touch-sensitive surface that recognizes not only when contact...

New Research Could Mean Faster Computers and Better Smart Phones
From ACM TechNews

New Research Could Mean Faster Computers and Better Smart Phones

University of Gothenburg researchers have found that graphene and carbon nanotubes could help reduce the size and power consumption of electronic circuits.

Remember Stuxnet? Why the U.s. Is Still Vulnerable
From ACM News

Remember Stuxnet? Why the U.s. Is Still Vulnerable

Last week, the Department of Homeland Security revealed a rash of cyber attacks on natural gas pipeline companies. Just as with previous cyber attacks on infrastructure...

Hot Trend in Computing: Chips That Sometimes Get It Wrong
From ACM News

Hot Trend in Computing: Chips That Sometimes Get It Wrong

Professor Krishna Palem of Rice University utilized a revolutionary form of computing known as "probablistic computing" to create a microchip that uses 30 times...

Mind-Controlled Robot Arms Show Promise
From ACM News

Mind-Controlled Robot Arms Show Promise

 Two people who are unable to move their limbs have been able to guide a robot arm to reach and grasp objects using only their brain activity, a paper in Nature ...

Floating Robots Use Gps-Enabled Smartphones to Track Water Flow
From ACM TechNews

Floating Robots Use Gps-Enabled Smartphones to Track Water Flow

University of California, Berkeley researchers have developed the Floating Sensor Network project, which offers a network of mobile sensors that can be rapidly...

Nasa Survey Counts Potentially Hazardous Asteroids
From ACM News

Nasa Survey Counts Potentially Hazardous Asteroids

Observations from NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) have led to the best assessment yet of our solar system's population of potentially hazardous...

Here Comes the Sunstorm
From ACM News

Here Comes the Sunstorm

With a peak in the cycle of solar flares approaching, U.S. electricity regulators are weighing their options for protecting the nation's grid from the sun's eruptions—including...

Scientists Read a Galaxy's Entrails
From ACM News

Scientists Read a Galaxy's Entrails

Astronomers are taking a long, deep look at one of the best-known galaxies beyond our own Milky Way, to learn more about what happened when it gobbled up another...

Researchers Propose Solution to 'Bufferbloat'
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Propose Solution to 'Bufferbloat'

Xerox PARC's Van Jacobson and Pollere's Kathleen Nichols have developed Controlled Delay, a queue management mechanism designed to solve the "bufferbloat" problem...

Implanted User Interfaces: I've Got You Under My Skin
From ACM News

Implanted User Interfaces: I've Got You Under My Skin

The human body is regularly augmented with technology, from pacemakers and hearing aids to magnets people embed under their skin to give them a new sense. However...

Robots Learn to Pick ­p Oddly Shaped Objects
From ACM TechNews

Robots Learn to Pick ­p Oddly Shaped Objects

Cornell University researchers have developed a algorithm that enables a robot to learn grasping skills from experience and apply them to new situations.

Intel Futurist on Why We Should Not Fear the Future
From ACM Opinion

Intel Futurist on Why We Should Not Fear the Future

Much of Intel's success as a microprocessor manufacturer over the past four decades has come from the company's ability to understand and anticipate the future...

Cyber Briefings 'scare The Bejeezus' Out Of Ceos
From ACM News

Cyber Briefings 'scare The Bejeezus' Out Of Ceos

For the CEOs of companies such as Dell and Hewlett-Packard, talk of cyberweapons and cyberwar could have been abstract. But at a classified security briefing in...

A Computer Interface that Takes a Load Off Your Mind
From ACM News

A Computer Interface that Takes a Load Off Your Mind

Conversations between people include a lot more than just words. All sorts of visual and aural cues indicate each party's state of mind and make for a productive...
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