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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 2018


From ACM TechNews

How a Yeast Cell Helps Crack Open the 'Black Box' Behind Artificial Intelligence

How a Yeast Cell Helps Crack Open the 'Black Box' Behind Artificial Intelligence

Researchers say they have developed a "visible" neural network, and have used it to construct a virtual model of a functioning brewer's yeast cell.


From ACM TechNews

Mining Hardware Helps Scientists Gain Insight Into Silicon Nanoparticles

Mining Hardware Helps Scientists Gain Insight Into Silicon Nanoparticles

Researchers have developed the first three-dimensional dynamic model of an interaction between light and silicon nanoparticles.


From ACM TechNews

Computer Science for All: Can Schools Pull It Off?

Computer Science for All: Can Schools Pull It Off?

The nascent Computer Science for All movement aims to help U.S. K-12 schools prepare every student to thrive in a tech-driven future.


From ACM News

Taking Radio Astronomy to the Next Level

Taking Radio Astronomy to the Next Level

After its latest upgrade, a radio telescope in Westerbork, the Netherlands, generates 3.7 terabits of data per second, an enormous data-stream that must be processed in real time.


From ACM News

Does a Quantum Equation Govern Some of the ­niverse's Large Structures?

Does a Quantum Equation Govern Some of the ­niverse's Large Structures?

Researchers who want to predict the behavior of systems governed by quantum mechanics—an electron in an atom, say, or a photon of light traveling through space—typically turn to the Schrödinger equation.


From ACM News

FBI Chief Signals Need to ­nderstand Potential Threats Tied to Cryptocurrency

FBI Chief Signals Need to ­nderstand Potential Threats Tied to Cryptocurrency

FBI Director Christopher Wray on Wednesday said the bureau must be prepared to confront a new set of emerging cyber threats.


From ACM TechNews

Hail Technology: Deep Learning May Help Predict When People Need Rides

Hail Technology: Deep Learning May Help Predict When People Need Rides

Researchers have found computers may be better at forecasting demand for taxi and ride-sharing services.


From ACM TechNews

Baidu's New AI Can Mimic Your Voice After Listening to It for Just One Minute

Baidu's New AI Can Mimic Your Voice After Listening to It for Just One Minute

Researchers at Chinese search giant Baidu say they have developed an artificial intelligence that can learn to precisely mimic a person's voice.


From ACM TechNews

Chimpanzees Help Researchers Improve Machine Learning of Animal Simulations

Chimpanzees Help Researchers Improve Machine Learning of Animal Simulations

New computer models of chimpanzees are improving understanding of their walking dynamics.


From ACM TechNews

New Low Light Camera Tech Will Improve AR Apps, Facial Recognition in Smartphones

New Low Light Camera Tech Will Improve AR Apps, Facial Recognition in Smartphones

Researchers in Israel have developed new imaging software that could help improve facial recognition systems and augmented reality apps on smartphones.


From ACM News

Google Researchers Are Learning How Machines Learn

Google Researchers Are Learning How Machines Learn

Machines are starting to learn tasks on their own. They are identifying faces, recognizing spoken words, reading medical scans and even carrying on their own conversations.


From ACM News

Wanna See Around Corners? Better Get Yourself a Laser

Wanna See Around Corners? Better Get Yourself a Laser

You can't see the bunny, but the picosecond laser certainly can.


From ACM News

Latest ­S Weather Satellite Highlights Forecasting Challenges

Latest ­S Weather Satellite Highlights Forecasting Challenges

The United States filled a crucial gap in its weather-forecasting arsenal when it launched its latest geostationary satellite on 1 March. The craft will enable meteorologists to track hurricanes, snow storms and other threats…


From ACM TechNews

Chemists Test Computer-Planned Syntheses for the First Time

Chemists Test Computer-Planned Syntheses for the First Time

Chemists have tested a computer program's ability to plan complete syntheses without human intervention.


From ACM TechNews

Supercomputing ­nder a New Lens: A Sandia-Developed Benchmark Re-Ranks Top Computers

Supercomputing ­nder a New Lens: A Sandia-Developed Benchmark Re-Ranks Top Computers

Sandia National Laboratories' High-Performance Conjugate Gradients benchmarking software program is gaining prominence as a tool for ranking supercomputer performance.


From ACM TechNews

JILA Team Invents New Way to 'See' the Quantum World

JILA Team Invents New Way to 'See' the Quantum World

A new imaging technique produces rapid, precise measurements of quantum behavior in an atomic clock as visual art.


From ACM News

Hackers' Delight: Does Quantum Computing Spell the End for Encryption?

Hackers' Delight: Does Quantum Computing Spell the End for Encryption?

Today's stalwart encryption methods used to send data securely over the Internet are expected to be no match for the power of tomorrow's quantum computers.


From ACM News

AI's Dirty Little Secret: It's Powered by People

AI's Dirty Little Secret: It's Powered by People

There's a dirty little secret about artificial intelligence: It's powered by hundreds of thousands of real people.


From ACM News

The Decentralized Internet Is Here, With Some Glitches

The Decentralized Internet Is Here, With Some Glitches

I usually write in Google's online word processor Google Docs, even when noting the company's shortcomings.


From ACM News

These Provocative Images Show Russian Trolls Sought to Inflame Debate Over Climate Change, Fracking and Dakota Pipeline

These Provocative Images Show Russian Trolls Sought to Inflame Debate Over Climate Change, Fracking and Dakota Pipeline

Russian trolls used Facebook, Instagram and Twitter to inflame U.S. political debate over energy policy and climate change, a finding that underscores how the Russian campaign of social media manipulation went beyond the 2016…


From ACM TechNews

Jumping Spiders and Flying Bees: The Rise of Bio-Inspired Microrobots

Jumping Spiders and Flying Bees: The Rise of Bio-Inspired Microrobots

University of Manchester researchers are developing jumping robot spiders and swarms of robotic bees.


From ACM TechNews

Machine Learning Could Improve How Doctors Diagnose Heart Attacks

Machine Learning Could Improve How Doctors Diagnose Heart Attacks

Researchers say they have used machine learning to teach computers to read cardiac electrical signals and interpret electrocardiograms with greater accuracy.


From ACM TechNews

Finding the Needle in a Digital Haystack

Finding the Needle in a Digital Haystack

Researchers are studying how to teach computers to define "normal" data, and then have them detect anomalies.


From ACM TechNews

HK­ST Researchers Develop First Innovative Fusion-Based Location Sensing Technology

HK­ST Researchers Develop First Innovative Fusion-Based Location Sensing Technology

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology researchers have developed a new fusion-based technology to support smart city projects.


From ACM TechNews

Virtual Reality Prepares Business Students for Digital Leadership

Virtual Reality Prepares Business Students for Digital Leadership

The ESMT Berlin business school is using virtual reality to teach leadership in a digital world to executives from some of Germany’s biggest companies.


From ACM TechNews

China Luring Young International IT Talent Away From Silicon Valley

China Luring Young International IT Talent Away From Silicon Valley

International students are being drawn to the Chinese technology field for opportunities to gain experience in advanced technology disciplines.


From ACM News

Has Dopamine Got ­s Hooked on Tech?

Has Dopamine Got ­s Hooked on Tech?

In an unprecedented attack of candour, Sean Parker, the 38-year-old founding president of Facebook, recently admitted that the social network was founded not to unite us, but to distract us.


From ACM News

Encrypted Smartphones Secure Your Identity, Not Just Your Data

Encrypted Smartphones Secure Your Identity, Not Just Your Data

Making phones easier to unlock potentially weakens this key element of securing people's online identities.


From ACM News

Spoof, Jam, Destroy: Why We Need a Backup for GPS

Spoof, Jam, Destroy: Why We Need a Backup for GPS

Earth got a warning shot on January 25, 2016. On that day, Air Force engineers were scheduled to kill off a GPS satellite named SVN-23—the oldest in the navigation constellation.


From ACM News

Astronomers Detect Light from the ­niverse's First Stars

Astronomers Detect Light from the ­niverse's First Stars

Astronomers have for the first time spotted long-sought signals of light from the earliest stars ever to form in the Universe—around 180 million years after the Big Bang.