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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.


Ais Are Starting to Learn Like Human Babies By Grasping and Poking Objects
From ACM TechNews

Ais Are Starting to Learn Like Human Babies By Grasping and Poking Objects

A project at Carnegie Mellon University could enable artificial intelligences to learn in a more human way. 

Imagine Discovering That Your Teaching Assistant Really Is a Robot
From ACM TechNews

Imagine Discovering That Your Teaching Assistant Really Is a Robot

Researchers at schools such as the Georgia Institute of Technology are testing artificial intelligence to relieve the burden of teaching assistants. 

Computer Gleans Chemical Insight from Lab Notebook Failures
From ACM News

Computer Gleans Chemical Insight from Lab Notebook Failures

Did your experiment fail? Don't bin the data just yet—they could be useful.

New Tech Uses Hardware, Software to Train Dogs More Efficiently
From ACM TechNews

New Tech Uses Hardware, Software to Train Dogs More Efficiently

North Carolina State University researchers have developed a customized suite of technologies that enables a computer to autonomously train a dog. 

Women in Tech Band Together to Track Diversity, After Hours
From ACM TechNews

Women in Tech Band Together to Track Diversity, After Hours

Eight prominent women activists from Silicon Valley have unveiled the Project employee diversity campaign.

Claude Shannon, the Father of the Information Age, Turns 1100100
From ACM News

Claude Shannon, the Father of the Information Age, Turns 1100100

Twelve years ago, Robert McEliece, a mathematician and engineer at Caltech, won the Claude E. Shannon Award, the highest honor in the field of information theory...

Asc16 Student Supercomputer Challenge Results Are In
From ACM TechNews

Asc16 Student Supercomputer Challenge Results Are In

The top prize in the Asia Supercomputer Community's 2016 Student Supercomputer Challenge went to the Huazhong University of Science and Technology team. 

Q&a: Python Creator Guido Van Rossum on How He Got His Start in Programming
From ACM News

Q&a: Python Creator Guido Van Rossum on How He Got His Start in Programming

Guido van Rossum is the creator of Python, one of the world’s most popular programming languages.

Does Learning Improve When Every Student Gets a Laptop?
From ACM TechNews

Does Learning Improve When Every Student Gets a Laptop?

Researchers have found "one-to-one" laptop programs that take a comprehensive approach were linked to higher test scores in English, math, science, and writing. ...

AI Talent Grab Sparks Excitement and Concern
From ACM Careers

AI Talent Grab Sparks Excitement and Concern

When Andrew Ng joined Google from Stanford University in 2011, he was among a trickle of artificial-intelligence (AI) experts in academia taking up roles in industry...

Can Technology Help Teach Literacy in Poor Communities?
From ACM TechNews

Can Technology Help Teach Literacy in Poor Communities?

Three studies have found tablet use effective in improving performance on standardized tests of reading preparedness by children in economically disadvantaged countries...

Researchers Explain How Stereotypes Keep Girls Out of Computer Science Classes
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Explain How Stereotypes Keep Girls Out of Computer Science Classes

Educators need to start earlier and set a strong foundation to resolve the gender gap in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields.

Coding as Sport
From Communications of the ACM

Coding as Sport

Programming competitions help identify and reward those who excel in coding.

Why Early STEM Education Will Drive the ­.s. Economy
From ACM TechNews

Why Early STEM Education Will Drive the ­.s. Economy

The Obama administration is continuing its campaign to advance math and science education. 

On This Waterfront, Robot Longshoremen Are the New Contenders
From ACM News

On This Waterfront, Robot Longshoremen Are the New Contenders

On one end of a dock at America's busiest port, tractor-trailers haul containers through dense, stop-and-go traffic. Sometimes they collide.

Scott Aaronson Answers Every Ridiculously Big Question I Throw at Him
From ACM Opinion

Scott Aaronson Answers Every Ridiculously Big Question I Throw at Him

Scott Aaronson has one of the highest intelligence/pretension ratios I’ve ever encountered.

­sing Data to Explore Poetic Sound
From ACM TechNews

­sing Data to Explore Poetic Sound

Michigan State University researcher Sean Pue is studying the role of sound in modern South Asian poetry. 

Computers That Crush Humans at Games Might Have Met Their Match: 'starcraft'
From ACM News

Computers That Crush Humans at Games Might Have Met Their Match: 'starcraft'

Humanity has fallen to artificial intelligence in checkers, chess, and, last month, Go, the complex ancient Chinese board game.

Europe Plans Giant Billion-Euro Quantum Technologies Project
From ACM News

Europe Plans Giant Billion-Euro Quantum Technologies Project

The European Commission has quietly announced plans to launch a €1-billion (US$1.13 billion) project to boost a raft of quantum technologies—from secure communication...

A Simple Way to Hasten the Arrival of Self-Driving Cars
From ACM TechNews

A Simple Way to Hasten the Arrival of Self-Driving Cars

Researchers have compiled a massive public dataset for self-driving vehicles culled from thousands of hours of data from a single stretch of road over a 12-month...
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