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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.


New Computer Exam Tested For the First Time By ­niversity Students
From ACM TechNews

New Computer Exam Tested For the First Time By ­niversity Students

The Linux Professional Institute recently tested its Linux Essentials exam program for the first time on students from Birmingham City University's School of Computing...

Gov. Cuomo Uses Blackberry Pin-to-Pin Messaging System to Contact Key Staffers When They Can't Talk on the Phone
From ACM News

Gov. Cuomo Uses Blackberry Pin-to-Pin Messaging System to Contact Key Staffers When They Can't Talk on the Phone

There's one phrase Gov. Cuomo never hears: "You’ve got mail!" 

In-Q-Tel: The Cia's Tax-Funded Player In Silicon Valley
From ACM Careers

In-Q-Tel: The Cia's Tax-Funded Player In Silicon Valley

For more than a decade the CIA has run its own venture capital fund called In-Q-Tel. It was founded in the late 1990s when the CIA was drowning in data and didn't...

Nasa's Car-Size Rover Nears Daring Landing on Mars
From ACM News

Nasa's Car-Size Rover Nears Daring Landing on Mars

NASA's most advanced planetary rover is on a precise course for an early August landing beside a Martian mountain to begin two years of unprecedented scientific...

How Google Is Becoming an Extension of Your Mind
From ACM Opinion

How Google Is Becoming an Extension of Your Mind

It's time to think of Google as much more than just a search engine, and that should both excite and spook you.

Would You Like to Play a Game? New AI Teaches Itself the Rules
From ACM TechNews

Would You Like to Play a Game? New AI Teaches Itself the Rules

Lukasz Kaiser has developed an AI program that can watch two-minute videos of simple board games being played, learn the rules, and then challenge human opponents...

Hacker Opens High Security Handcuffs with 3D-Printed and Laser-Cut Keys
From ACM News

Hacker Opens High Security Handcuffs with 3D-Printed and Laser-Cut Keys

The security of high-end handcuffs depends on a detainee not having access to certain small, precisely-shaped objects. In the age of easy 3D printing and other...

The Death of Cash
From ACM News

The Death of Cash

Café Grumpy is the kind of hipster hangout that wouldn't deign to trumpet itself.

'clonewise' Security Service Helps Identify Vulnerable Code
From ACM TechNews

'clonewise' Security Service Helps Identify Vulnerable Code

Deakin University researchers have developed Clonewise, a service for finding common code in programs, which could help find vulnerable libraries built into larger...

Step Inside the Large Hadron Collider
From ACM News

Step Inside the Large Hadron Collider

The Compact Muon Solenoid is one of two main detectors at the LHC. It weighs 12,500 tons, measures 69 ft. (21 m) in length, and is a key research tool for 2,000...

The Eyes Have It: Marketers Now Track Shoppers' Retinas
From ACM News

The Eyes Have It: Marketers Now Track Shoppers' Retinas

Consumer-products companies are turning to new technology to overcome the biggest obstacle to learning what shoppers really think: what the shoppers say.

Tridium's Niagara Framework: Marvel of Connectivity Illustrates New Cyber Risks
From ACM News

Tridium's Niagara Framework: Marvel of Connectivity Illustrates New Cyber Risks

John Sublett and his colleagues had an audacious, digital-age plan. They wanted to use the Internet to enable businesses to manage any kind of electronic device...

Laser Beam Keeps Robo-Plane Buzzing For Two Days Straight
From ACM News

Laser Beam Keeps Robo-Plane Buzzing For Two Days Straight

LaserMotive has demonstrated a power system that can keep Lockheed Martin's Stalker unmanned aerial vehicle going for more than 48 hours with laser light—but that's...

Welcome to the Programming Language Explosion
From ACM TechNews

Welcome to the Programming Language Explosion

Mission-critical business software has for years largely been written in Cobol or RPG if it was on a mainframe, but the personal computer language market is much...

Wimpy Cores Are Coming to Facebook. But Which Cores?
From ACM News

Wimpy Cores Are Coming to Facebook. But Which Cores?

Facebook has made waves by detailing its plans to use what an executive calls "cell-phone chips"—or "wimpy cores"—in its future data centers.

Future Planetary Rovers May Make Their Own Decisions
From ACM Opinion

Future Planetary Rovers May Make Their Own Decisions

It's a hot summer day, and your eyes spot an ice cream cart up ahead. Without even really thinking, you start walking that direction. Planetary scientists would...

The Drone Zone
From ACM News

The Drone Zone

Holloman Air Force Base, at the eastern edge of New Mexico's White Sands Missile Range, 200 miles south of Albuquerque, was once famous for the daredevil maneuvers...

­.s. ­rged to Recruit Master Hackers to Wage Cyber War on Al-Qaida
From ACM News

­.s. ­rged to Recruit Master Hackers to Wage Cyber War on Al-Qaida

Instead of prosecuting elite computer hackers, the U.S. government should recruit them to launch cyber-attacks against Islamist terrorists and other foes, according...

Google Remakes Online Empire With 'Colossus'
From ACM News

Google Remakes Online Empire With 'Colossus'

More than a decade ago, Google built a new foundation for its search engine.

A Phone That Knows Where You're Going
From ACM TechNews

A Phone That Knows Where You're Going

Researchers have developed an algorithm that follows a person's mobility patterns and also analyzes the patterns of people in the user's social network. In a study...
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