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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.


Google Gives Search a Refresh
From ACM News

Google Gives Search a Refresh

Google Inc. is giving its tried-and-true Web-search formula a makeover as it tries to fix the shortcomings of today's technology and maintain its dominant market...

U.s. Army to Soldiers: 'check-Ins' Can Kill
From ACM News

U.s. Army to Soldiers: 'check-Ins' Can Kill

While the U.S. Army knows its soldiers live in the modern world and carry location-aware, socially networked smartphones, it is reiterating the dangers of broadcasting...

Xbox at 10 in Europe: How the Console Shaped Gaming History
From ACM Opinion

Xbox at 10 in Europe: How the Console Shaped Gaming History

The games industry was a very different place 10 years ago. Still dominated by Japanese games and Japanese games machines, Microsoft's plans to launch its own dedicated...

New Interest in Hacking as Threat to Security
From ACM News

New Interest in Hacking as Threat to Security

During the five-month period between October and February, there were 86 reported attacks on computer systems in the United States that control critical infrastructure...

Scientists Tap the Genius of Babies and Youngsters to Make Computers Smarter
From ACM TechNews

Scientists Tap the Genius of Babies and Youngsters to Make Computers Smarter

University of California, Berkeley researchers are studying how babies, toddlers, and preschoolers learn in order to program computers to think more like humans...

Arm Wants to Put the Internet in Your ­mbrella
From ACM News

Arm Wants to Put the Internet in Your ­mbrella

Chip designer ARM wants to put the internet in your fridge. And it insists this cliche of tech prognostication is no longer just talk. Really.

Life on Mars? Funds to Find Answer Fade
From ACM News

Life on Mars? Funds to Find Answer Fade

Just as NASA is on the cusp of answering the most fascinating questions about Mars—is there, was there or could there be life there?—the money needed to provide...

From ACM News

Software Translates Your Voice Into Another Language

Researchers at Microsoft have made software that can learn the sound of your voice, and then use it to speak a language that you don't.

Ub Team's Software Is Set to Eyeball Liars
From ACM TechNews

Ub Team's Software Is Set to Eyeball Liars

University of Buffalo researchers have developed video-analysis software that can analyze eye movements and determine when people are lying with significant accuracy...

Researchers Can't Identify Programming Language ­sed in Duqu, Ask For Help
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Can't Identify Programming Language ­sed in Duqu, Ask For Help

A large portion of the Duqu Trojan was written in an unusual programming language, according to malware experts at Kaspersky Lab.  

Berkeley Supports It Startups High Atop the Campus
From ACM News

Berkeley Supports It Startups High Atop the Campus

High above the University of California, Berkeley campus, IT entrepreneurs are being given the opportunity to grow their startups in the four-month-old Skydeck...

A Bit of Progress: Diamonds Shatter Quantum Information Storage Record
From ACM News

A Bit of Progress: Diamonds Shatter Quantum Information Storage Record

The quantum world and the everyday world of human experience are supposed to be two different realms. Quantum effects, as demonstrated in the lab, are usually confined...

Sometimes the Quickest Path Is Not a Sraight Line
From ACM News

Sometimes the Quickest Path Is Not a Sraight Line

Sometimes the fastest pathway from point A to point B is not a straight line: for example, if you're underwater and contending with strong and shifting currents...

W3c Ceo Calls Html5 as Transformative as Early Web
From ACM TechNews

W3c Ceo Calls Html5 as Transformative as Early Web

World Wide Web Consortium CEO Jeff Jaffe says HTML5 will be among the most disruptive elements to hit organizations since the early days of the Internet.  

New Darpa Challenge Wants ­nique Algorithms For Space Applications
From ACM TechNews

New Darpa Challenge Wants ­nique Algorithms For Space Applications

DARPA will launch the Zero Robotics Autonomous Space Capture Challenge on March 28, a contest that asks participants to develop unique algorithms to control small...

Internet Censorship Revealed Through the Haze of Malware Pollution
From ACM TechNews

Internet Censorship Revealed Through the Haze of Malware Pollution

To explain how the Egyptian and Libyan governments shut down the Internet in their countries in early 2011, researchers at the University of California, San Diego...

Indiana Jones Goes Geek: Laser-Mapping LiDAR Revolutionizes Archaeology
From ACM News

Indiana Jones Goes Geek: Laser-Mapping LiDAR Revolutionizes Archaeology

"This is it—the paradigm shift," archaeologist Chris Fisher told Ars. "Just like the advent of radiocarbon dating, LiDAR will have the same impact."

Behind The Mask, Accused Lulzsec Members Left Trail Of Clues Online
From ACM News

Behind The Mask, Accused Lulzsec Members Left Trail Of Clues Online

When the long arm of the law reached in to arrest members of Anonymous's senior leadership on Tuesday, speculation immediately turned to the identities of the six...

How Hackers Are Caught Out By Law Enforcers
From ACM News

How Hackers Are Caught Out By Law Enforcers

The Internet has gained a reputation as somewhere you can say and do anything with impunity, primarily because it is easy to disguise your identity.

Cyberwar Is Already ­pon ­S
From ACM Opinion

Cyberwar Is Already ­pon ­S

In the nearly 20 years since David Ronfeldt and I introduced our concept of cyberwar, this new mode of conflict has become a reality.
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