The news archive provides access to past news stories from Communications of the ACM and other sources by date.
Demand for new technologies from office developers and tenants is fueling competition between suppliers.
Tesla has unveiled a new feature allowing drivers to remotely call their Tesla car to drive itself through a parking lot to pick them up.
Weekly danceLogic classes offered by Philadelphia’s West Park Cultural Center include one hour of dance instruction and practice, followed by an hour of coding.
China holds great market potential for virtual reality and augmented reality.
The European Commission this week introduced ethics guidelines to inform the development of artificial intelligence.
Astronomers have finally glimpsed the blackness of a black hole. By stringing together a global network of radio telescopes, they have for the first time produced a picture of an event horizon—a black hole's perilous edge—against…
Stanford University's Mendel Rosenblum transformed datacenters by reinventing virtual machines.
Researchers hope to train artificial intelligence to master Hanabi, a card game in which everyone wins or loses depending on how well they communicate.
WhatsApp's new tip line for misinformation in India could be a precursor for how parent company Facebook tries to address fake news.
The growth in University of Wisconsin-Madison student demand for computer science is resulting in difficulty finding lecture halls large enough to accommodate all students.
The 5G wireless technology now being introduced by phone companies promises to bring a world of innovations to mobile service—from connected appliances to self-driving cars—just as cable transformed television generations ago…
The Arpanet@50.
Eric Jones is finally to be unmasked as the 'king of calm' in Hut 3 who channelled the work of the wartime codebreakers.
On the evening of March 19, the mathematician Karen Uhlenbeck gathered with revelers at the Institute for Advanced Study for a champagne reception.
For the past year, space probe Hayabusa2 has pelted asteroid Ryugu with bouncing probes, shot a bullet at it, and taken a bite of it—all for science.
Australian regulators are cautiously using artificial intelligence to address a lack of compliance across that nation’s financial sector.
Goldman Sachs is accepting applications for a new program that will pay student computer engineers $100,000 to tackle "commercially oriented" research challenges.
Ethical hackers conducted simulated cyberattacks on U.K. university defenses, and were able to successfully access "high-value" information within two hours.
U.S.-based airlines have been asked to respond to reports of cameras installed in airplane seat backs.
Researchers at Toyota Motor have developed a robot that can make free throws and three-point shots on a basketball court.
Tokyo, Japan-based DeNA has developed a program to direct cruising taxi drivers to streets where they are most likely to find customers.
Google says the fiber optic cable it's building across the Atlantic Ocean will be the fastest of its kind.
U.S. security concerns about 5G mobile networks built by Chinese telecoms giant Huawei appear to be driven by politics and trade rather than any evidence, the head of the U.N. internet and telecoms agency said on Friday.
Researchers led by Aalto University in Finland used computational methods to reposition keyboard characters for easier, more intuitive typing in French.
Artificial intelligence researchers are calling on Amazon to stop selling its facial recognition software to police.
CAVE, a shared virtual reality experience that transports audiences back to 10,000 BC, will debut April 24 at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival.
Iceland-based Aha uses aerial drones to deliver food and small consumer goods.
Walmart this month will launch a new service in which customers can order groceries virtually through Google Assistant.
Sometimes a technology that's been simmering in the laboratory or the clinic for decades makes the leap to mainstream consumption almost overnight.
Yoshua Bengio is one of three computer scientists who last week shared the US$1-million A. M. Turing award—one of the field's top prizes.