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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.


Patents Emerge as Significant Tech Strategy
From ACM TechNews

Patents Emerge as Significant Tech Strategy

Technology companies' patent practices have shifted from using them to defend their own inventions to deploying them as an important part of competitive strategies...

Smarter Cameras Help You Take Slicker Snaps
From ACM TechNews

Smarter Cameras Help You Take Slicker Snaps

University of Glasgow researcher Stephen Brewster is developing a camera interface designed to make it easier for photographers to get pictures right on the first...

How an Extinct Zebra Could Upend the Networking Market
From ACM TechNews

How an Extinct Zebra Could Upend the Networking Market

The Internet Systems Consortium has created a project to stabilize the code base for Quagga, an open source networking program, and offer commercial support to...

Future Computers Could Rewire Themselves
From ACM News

Future Computers Could Rewire Themselves

Future microchips may have only one type of component, capable of rewiring itself to do different jobs. Researchers from Northwestern University in the U.S. have...

Did Android Copy Ios? We Asked Google's Product Manager...
From ACM Opinion

Did Android Copy Ios? We Asked Google's Product Manager...

Has Android copied elements from Apple's iOS? It's not a matter that Google's senior managers for the Android operating system want to get involved in.

How Revolutionary Tools Cracked a 1700s Code
From ACM News

How Revolutionary Tools Cracked a 1700s Code

It has been more than six decades since Warren Weaver, a pioneer in automated language translation, suggested applying code-breaking techniques to the challenge...

AI Pioneer John Mccarthy, 1927-2011
From ACM News

AI Pioneer John Mccarthy, 1927-2011

Artificial intelligence pioneer and Lisp creator John McCarthy, who received the A.M. Turing Award in 1971, passed away on October 23. He was 84.

John McCarthy
From ACM News

John McCarthy

When IBM's Deep Blue supercomputer won its famous chess rematch with then world champion Garry Kasparov in May 1997, the victory was hailed far and wide as a...

Microsoft's Roslyn: Reinventing the Compiler as We Know It
From ACM TechNews

Microsoft's Roslyn: Reinventing the Compiler as We Know It

Microsoft recently launched Project Roslyn, a compiler-as-a-service technology that aims to bring powerful new features to C#, Visual Basic, and Visual Studio. 

11 Most Startling Revelations in 'steve Jobs'
From ACM News

11 Most Startling Revelations in 'steve Jobs'

Full disclosure: Steve Jobs was my white whale, the interview I wanted more than any other and the day he died I fashioned a black band across the Apple logo...

­.s. Tops China in Programming, but Lags in Math, Logic
From ACM TechNews

­.s. Tops China in Programming, but Lags in Math, Logic

Gild has issued a plea to improve the way math and computer programming is taught in U.S. schools after the results from its new study found that Chinese developers...

Robotic Venus Flytrap Snags Prey
From ACM News

Robotic Venus Flytrap Snags Prey

Carnivorous plants have long fascinated humans with their blood-sucking capabilities. The Venus flytrap is even smart enough to pause before snapping shut, ensuring...

Meet Arm's Cortex A15: The Future of the Ipad, and Possibly the Macbook Air
From ACM News

Meet Arm's Cortex A15: The Future of the Ipad, and Possibly the Macbook Air

In addition to unveiling its Cortex A7 processor last Wednesday, the press event was also a sort of second debut for the Cortex A15. The A15 will go into ARM...

From ACM News

Intel Faces Colossal Clash

Written off by some critics as a doomed dinosaur, stuck in the tar pit of a stalling personal computer market, Intel is headed for a colossal clash as it scrambles...

Why Computer Voices Are Mostly Female
From ACM News

Why Computer Voices Are Mostly Female

To most owners of the new iPhone, the voice-activated feature called Siri is more than a virtual "assistant" who can help schedule appointments, find a good nearby...

Hacking Cars
From Communications of the ACM

Hacking Cars

Researchers have discovered important security flaws in modern automobile systems. Will car thieves learn to pick locks with their laptops?

Precision-Controlled Microbots Show They Could Take On Industrial-Scale Jobs
From ACM News

Precision-Controlled Microbots Show They Could Take On Industrial-Scale Jobs

A pioneering research institute that introduced the computer world to the mouse, hypertext, and networks is now setting its sights a bit lower.

Tiny Stamps for Tiny Sensors
From ACM News

Tiny Stamps for Tiny Sensors

Advances in microchip technology may someday enable clinicians to perform tests for hundreds of diseases—sifting out specific molecules, such as early stage cancer...

A Picture of Democracy
From ACM News

A Picture of Democracy

How digital cameras and smartphones might reduce corruption in Afghanistan and elsewhere.

From ACM News

Faq on Son of Stuxnet

What is Duqu? Duqu (pronounced dyu kyu) is primarily a remote-access Trojan targeted at a limited number of organizations in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East...
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