The news archive provides access to past news stories from Communications of the ACM and other sources by date.
It was a great way to mix science with gambling, says Anna Dreber.
Stephen Hawking on Wednesday opened an artificial research center at Cambridge University in the U.K.
Unless technology companies and educators start reaching out to young women and girls, the number of women in the computer science field will drop, a new report finds.
Canada’s "Father of Computing" was 95.
The race is on build a "universal" quantum computer. Such a device could be programmed to speedily solve problems that classical computers cannot crack, potentially revolutionizing fields from pharmaceuticals to cryptography.
It's hot enough to melt lead, the acid rain will scorch the flesh from your bones – and it's the perfect place to raise a family. Venus, not Mars, might be the off-world destination of choice for future space colonists.
A move to provide free Internet services yields some unexpected consequences.
Hillary Clinton is heading for a landslide victory over Donald Trump. But wait.
After a suspenseful night waiting for a signal from the ExoMars Schiaparelli lander, the European Space Agency (ESA) confirmed today that the spacecraft went silent less than a minute before it was set to reach the Martian surface…
Northwestern University researchers have developed an online tool that can predict whether citizens will vote for Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton based on their tweets.
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab's "Moral Machine" platform lets the public judge the types of ethical decisions autonomous vehicles should make.
The U.S. National Science Foundation on Tuesday distributed 11 grants, totaling $12 million, to researchers working to expand the reach of wireless technology.
Many U.S. counties using voting machines lack paper trails for verification of results of the presidential election in November, says a Worcester Polytechnic Institute professor.
Half of American adults are in a face-recognition database, according to a Georgetown University study released Tuesday.
The next target for NASA's New Horizons mission—which made a historic flight past Pluto in July 2015—apparently bears a colorful resemblance to its famous, main destination.
At 24, Benjamin Dupree has outlived many people with Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
Considering the utilization, opportunities, and future challenges of Artificial Intelligence.
Most commuters keep their eyes down in the morning while traipsing through the gleaming corridors of London’s Euston Underground station.
The Obama administration is contemplating an unprecedented cyber covert action against Russia in retaliation for alleged Russian interference in the American presidential election, U.S. intelligence officials told NBC News.
ACM president Vicki L. Hanson expects the ranks of women in information technology fields to grow as computer skills become increasingly necessary for all industries.
Australian researchers say they have dramatically expanded the time in which future silicon quantum computers would be able to perform calculations.
The lack of data on how driverless automobiles' performance compares with human drivers makes it difficult to determine the safety benefits of autonomous vehicles.
Researchers from the University of Tokyo's JSK Lab say they have developed a more efficient way to cool humanoid robots.
University of California, Riverside esearchers say they have developed a reliable, accurate navigation system that exploits existing environmental signals.
Researchers are developing novel ways of capturing facial micro-expressions that are essential to creating natural dialogue and nuanced actor-specific emotions.
For most of humanity's existence, communication has been incredibly slow.
Late last week Obama administration officials used NBC News to send Moscow a cryptic threat: The U.S. government is "contemplating an unprecedented cyber covert action" against Russia for allegedly interfering in the upcoming…
It's midday on Mars. The scarlet skies are clear and it's a balmy zero degrees—the perfect conditions for a day out.
Researchers from Sandia National Laboratories and Harvard University have demonstrated on one chip all the elements needed to create a quantum bridge to link quantum computers together.
Rice University researchers are developing a laser-free, pulse-based radio system to support a transmission rate of 1 terabit per second.