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Communications of the ACM

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The news archive provides access to past news stories from Communications of the ACM and other sources by date.

March 2012


From ACM News

When Gaming Is Good For You

When Gaming Is Good For You

A growing body of university research suggests that gaming improves creativity, decision-making and perception.


From ACM News

Better Living Through Video Gaming

Better Living Through Video Gaming

From AI-designed games to realistic virtual worlds and social physics, gaming is changing our world view.


From ACM Opinion

Jeff Jaffe Lights a Fire ­nder Web Standardization

Jeff Jaffe Lights a Fire ­nder Web Standardization

 It's been an action-packed two years since Jeff Jaffe took over as the World Wide Web Consortium's chief executive, but more action is the order of the day at the standards group.


From ACM News

An App That Helps You Cozy ­p to Strangers

An App That Helps You Cozy ­p to Strangers

Paul Davison is in a hurry. Not just to board the plane that's about to take him to his father's retirement party in San Diego, or to get through the talking points about his new iPhone app, Highlight.


From ACM News

The First Google Maps War

The First Google Maps War

Did Google Maps almost cause a war in 2010? On Nov. 3 of that year, Edén Pastora, the Nicaraguan official tasked with dredging the Rio San Juan, justified his country's incursion into neighboring Costa Rica's territory by claiming…


From ACM TechNews

Stanford Offers More Free Online Classes For the World

Stanford Offers More Free Online Classes For the World

Stanford University is introducing five free online classes in March as the next step in a university initiative to use new technologies to improve education. The classes follow the launch of pilot classes last fall, which drew…


From ACM News

Stakeout: How the Fbi Tracked and Busted a Chicago Anon

Stakeout: How the Fbi Tracked and Busted a Chicago Anon

"Script kiddie." No hacker worth his salt wants to hear the term used to describe him.


From ACM TechNews

Cloud Will Create 14 Million Jobs, Study Says

Cloud Will Create 14 Million Jobs, Study Says

Cloud computing technologies will help create nearly 14 million technology-related jobs worldwide by 2015, resulting in $1.1 trillion in revenue annually, according to a Microsoft and IDC report.


From ACM News

What Geography Can Teach ­S About Basketball

What Geography Can Teach ­S About Basketball

The annual Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, created in 2006, has become something like Bonnaroo for sports nerds. And if there was a breakout star at this year's gathering, held at MIT this past weekend, it may have been Kirk…


From ACM TechNews

Microsoft Devises Faster, More Power-Efficient Mobile Browsing System

Microsoft Devises Faster, More Power-Efficient Mobile Browsing System

Microsoft is developing PocketWeb, a mobile browser system that offers faster search results and conserves battery life.  


From ACM News

AI Designs Its Own Video Game

AI Designs Its Own Video Game

It is never going to compete with the latest iteration of Call of Duty, but then Space Station Invaders is not your typical blockbuster video game. While modern shooters involve hundreds of programmers and cost millions of dollars…


From ACM TechNews

Research in Programming Languages

Research in Programming Languages

Crista Videira Lopes has had a difficult time determining whether academic research in programming languages is a worthwhile endeavor.  


From ACM Careers

Hackers Vie For More Than $1 Million to Take Down Browsers

As alleged hackers from LulzSec and Anonymous contemplate the possibility of a life behind bars, other hackers are limbering up in Canada this week to vie for more than $1 million in prize money for their hacking prowess.


From ACM News

Hackers Arrested as One Turns Witness

Hackers Arrested as One Turns Witness

Federal prosecutors brought charges against a group of men allegedly behind "LulzSec"—a globe-spanning collective of computer hackers who wreaked havoc on companies, governments and individuals world-wide—after one turned government…


From ACM News

The Bright Side of Being Hacked

The Bright Side of Being Hacked

Hackers operating under the banner Anonymous have been poking a finger in the eye of one private company after another for two years now.

 


From ACM News

Stuxnet: Computer Worm Opens New Era of Warfare

Stuxnet: Computer Worm Opens New Era of Warfare

For the past few months now, the nation's top military, intelligence and law enforcement officials have been warning Congress and the country about a coming cyberattack against critical infrastructure in the United States that…


From ACM TechNews

Oak Ridge Morphing Jaguar Supercomputer Into 10+ Petaflop Titan

Oak Ridge Morphing Jaguar Supercomputer Into 10+ Petaflop Titan

The U.S. Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory is upgrading the Jaguar supercomputer, which is currently the most powerful system in the United States.  


From ACM TechNews

A Match For Angry Words

A Match For Angry Words

The Dr. Fill artificial intelligence program will debut March 16 at the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament.  


From ACM TechNews

Dot-Brand Explosion Will Shell-Shock Lazy Coders-ICANN

Dot-Brand Explosion Will Shell-Shock Lazy Coders-ICANN

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers reports that software developers and Webmasters need to keep track of its new generic top-level domain program to ensure that users are able to reach the domains starting…


From ACM News

Number 1 on Army's Shopping List: Wireless Broadband

Number 1 on Army's Shopping List: Wireless Broadband

The most important element of the Army's effort to modernize itself doesn't shoot. You can't ride in it. You can't wear it for protection against homemade bombs.


From ACM News

Why the Security Industry Never Actually Makes ­s Secure

Why the Security Industry Never Actually Makes ­s Secure

Every year, security vendors gather at the RSA conference here to reaffirm their commitment to fencing out hackers and keeping data safe. And every year, corporate and government Web sites continue to fall victim to basic attacks…


From ACM News

Behold the Cheetah Robot. The Singularity Is Nigh!

Behold the Cheetah Robot. The Singularity Is Nigh!

Big defense budgets during the aughts financed the deployment of thousands of robots, including unmanned aerial and underwater vehicles, to Iraq and Afghanistan. The Pentagon's fascination with robots hasn’t slackened even in…


From ACM News

Parkagent Seeks to Reduce Urban Traffic Congestion

Parkagent Seeks to Reduce Urban Traffic Congestion

Researchers in Israel and the Netherlands have teamed up to create PARKAGENT, a spatially explicit agent-based software model designed to assess and optimize urban parking policies.  


From ACM News

The Little White Box That Can Hack Your Network

The Little White Box That Can Hack Your Network

When Jayson E. Street broke into the branch office of a national bank in May of last year, the branch manager could not have been more helpful.


From ACM TechNews

Pushing the Boundaries of Artificial Intelligence

Pushing the Boundaries of Artificial Intelligence

Boston University Neuromorphics Laboratory researchers are developing an artificial intelligence-based robotics technology that can sense, learn, and adapt.  


From ACM News

Here's The Best (and Prettiest) Way To See Exactly How You're Being Tracked Online

Here's The Best (and Prettiest) Way To See Exactly How You're Being Tracked Online

Firefox-browser provider Mozilla has released an awesome new tool for seeing how you're being tracked on the Web.


From ACM TechNews

Simulator Computes Evacuation Scenarios for Major Events

Technical University Munich researchers are leading the Interactive Pedestrian Simulation for Regional Evacuation project, which is developing emergency evacuation software that can be used to compute different scenarios at specific…


From ACM TechNews

New Computers Respond to Students' Emotions, Boredom

New Computers Respond to Students' Emotions, Boredom

University of Notre Dame researchers have developed AutoTutor and Affective AutoTutor, intelligent tutoring programs that model and respond to students' cognitive and emotional states.  


From ACM TechNews

Stroustrup Reveals What's New in C++ 11

Stroustrup Reveals What's New in C++ 11

Texas A&M University professor Bjarne Stroustrup recently spoke with InfoWorld's Paul Krill about the past, present, and future of C++, which was recently upgraded via the C++ 11 release.


From ACM TechNews

Automated Stress Testing for Web 2.0 Applications Helps Web Developers Find Programming Errors

Saarland University researchers are developing methods for automating and systematically testing Web applications for malfunctions and security vulnerabilities.