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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.

August 2014


From ACM TechNews

Seven Ways DARPA Is Trying to Kill the Password

Seven Ways DARPA Is Trying to Kill the Password

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is funding research at institutions working on desktop and mobile authentication technologies.


From ACM TechNews

The Internet of Things Brings Far-Reaching Security Threats

The Internet of Things Brings Far-Reaching Security Threats

U.S. Defense Advanced Research Project Agency program manager Randy Garrett warns the advent of the Internet of Things will create a large number of new threat vectors that could be exploited by malicious hackers.


From ACM TechNews

STEM Partnerships Connect Students to Schools and Libraries

STEM Partnerships Connect Students to Schools and Libraries

Public libraries have started partnering with local schools to provide science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education to students. A recent survey found that one in six libraries host maker spaces focused on STEM…


From ACM News

Can an Armadillo Paper Airplane Fly? Autodesk Says Yes

Can an Armadillo Paper Airplane Fly? Autodesk Says Yes

We've all made the standard paper airplane, that elongated triangle made up of six simple folds.


From ACM News

A Grand Vision For the Impossible

A Grand Vision For the Impossible

Subhash Khot's bold conjecture is helping mathematicians explore the precise limitations of computation.


From ACM Careers

When Hackers Test For Flaws, They Might Earn Cash—or Threats

When Hackers Test For Flaws, They Might Earn Cash—or Threats

To hack or not to hack?


From ACM Opinion

Why One of Cybersecurity's Thought Leaders ­ses a Pager Instead of a Smart Phone

Why One of Cybersecurity's Thought Leaders ­ses a Pager Instead of a Smart Phone

In the computer and network security industry, few people are as well known as Dan Geer.


From ACM TechNews

Microsoft Shows Off Video Stabilization Tools

Microsoft Shows Off Video Stabilization Tools

New software from Microsoft researchers can stabilize shaky video taken while cycling, climbing, kayaking, or engaging in some other high-speed sport, and speed the footage up to make it more watchable.


From ACM TechNews

Big Data's High-Priests of Algorithms

Big Data's High-Priests of Algorithms

Industry demand for data scientists is exploding with many businesses looking for people skilled in sifting through massive volumes of data streaming in from different sources for patterns into customer habits and in crafting…


From ACM TechNews

What Cars Did for Today's World, Data May Do for Tomorrow's

What Cars Did for Today's World, Data May Do for Tomorrow's

The acquisition and processing of digital information has become the dominant industrial ecosystem, which calls for new and improved ways of collecting, shipping, and processing data.


From ACM TechNews

Google's Big-Data Tool, Mesa, Holds Petabytes of Data Across Multiple Servers

Google's Big-Data Tool, Mesa, Holds Petabytes of Data Across Multiple Servers

Google says its big-data architecture, Mesa, can store petabytes of data, update millions of rows of data per second, and field trillions of queries daily across multiple servers, enabling continuous operation of the data warehouse…


From ACM TechNews

U-M Developing Wearable Tech For Disease Monitoring

U-M Developing Wearable Tech For Disease Monitoring

University of Michigan researchers are developing a wearable vapor sensor that could offer continuous disease monitoring for patients with diabetes, high blood pressure, anemia, or lung disease.


From ACM Careers

Here's How the Feds Are Teaming Up With Hackers to Save US All from Robocalls

Here's How the Feds Are Teaming Up With Hackers to Save US All from Robocalls

The Federal Trade Commission is at one of the world's biggest hacker conferences this weekend, where hackers are competing to help save us all from robocalls.


From ACM TechNews

A New Chip Functions Like a Brain, Ibm Says

A New Chip Functions Like a Brain, Ibm Says

IBM researchers have developed a new kind of computer chip that tries to mimic the way brains recognize patterns, relying on densely interconnected webs of transistors similar to the brain's neural network.


From ACM News

Traffic Light Hackers Could Cause Jams Across the US

Traffic Light Hackers Could Cause Jams Across the US

Branden Ghena pulls his car up under a traffic light in a city in Michigan.


From ACM News

Malware Traffic Spikes Preceded Russian and Israeli Conflicts

Malware Traffic Spikes Preceded Russian and Israeli Conflicts

A study of malware operating on corporate and government networks suggests that the communication patterns of these programs could warn of major conflicts.


From ACM News

Augmented Reality Gives Physical World a Vrtual Dimension

Augmented Reality Gives Physical World a Vrtual Dimension

For some it seems, the world is not enough.


From ACM Careers

Meet the Puzzle Mastermind Who Designs Def Con's Hackable Badges

Meet the Puzzle Mastermind Who Designs Def Con's Hackable Badges

Def Con is one of the world's biggest hacker conventions, an annual gathering of security experts, cryptographers and at least a few people who could surreptitiously drain your bank account if they wanted.


From ACM TechNews

Now You Can See the Invisible

Now You Can See the Invisible

University of California, Santa Barbara researchers are using Wi-Fi signals to look through solid walls and see what is on the other side.


From ACM TechNews

Mobile Gadgets That Connect to Wi-Fi Without a Battery

Mobile Gadgets That Connect to Wi-Fi Without a Battery

A new breed of mobile wireless device does not need a battery or other energy storage to send data over Wi-Fi. Researchers have  developed prototype gadgets that obtain power by using the Wi-Fi, TV, radio, and cellular signals…


From ACM TechNews

Transportation Institute Works on Study That Could Display Traffic Signs Inside Vehicles

Transportation Institute Works on Study That Could Display Traffic Signs Inside Vehicles

Researchers at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Transportation Institute are exploring the idea of moving traffic signs from the side of the road and into vehicles via dashboard screens.


From ACM TechNews

Alternative STEM Programs Offer Early Career Prep For Students

Alternative STEM Programs Offer Early Career Prep For Students

The Alaska Native Science & Engineering Program's Summer Bridge program included more than 20 high school students who took college-level math courses and interned with STEM-oriented agencies or companies.


From ACM TechNews

A Room Where Executives Go to Get Help from IBM's Watson

A Room Where Executives Go to Get Help from IBM's Watson

IBM researchers are experimenting with a room where executives can go to discuss business problems with a version of the Watson supercomputing system.


From ACM News

Cassini Prepares For Its Biggest Remaining Burn

Cassini Prepares For Its Biggest Remaining Burn

NASA's Cassini spacecraft will execute the largest planned maneuver of the spacecraft's remaining mission on Saturday, Aug. 9. The maneuver will target Cassini toward an Aug. 21 encounter with Saturn's largest moon, Titan.


From ACM News

Origami Robot Folds Itself ­p, Crawls Away

Origami Robot Folds Itself ­p, Crawls Away

For years, a team of researchers at MIT and Harvard University has been working on origami robots—reconfigurable robots that would be able to fold themselves into arbitrary shapes.


From ACM News

Messaging App Lets You Leave Secrets on Street Corners

Messaging App Lets You Leave Secrets on Street Corners

It's your birthday and a message from a friend suggests you go to a nearby street corner.


From ACM News

Organic Synthesis: The Robo-Chemist

Organic Synthesis: The Robo-Chemist

In faded photographs from the 1960s, organic-chemistry laboratories look like an alchemist's paradise.


From ACM Opinion

How Wwi Codebreakers Taught Your Gas Meter to Snitch on You

How Wwi Codebreakers Taught Your Gas Meter to Snitch on You

In the depths of night on August 5th 1914 the British Cable Ship Alert took the first significant action of World War I, severing the five German submarine cables that ran through the English Channel.


From ACM TechNews

No-Power Wi-Fi Connectivity Could Fuel Internet of Things Reality

No-Power Wi-Fi Connectivity Could Fuel Internet of Things Reality

Wi-Fi backscatter uses RF signals as a power source and reuses Wi-Fi infrastructure to provide Internet connectivity to Internet of Things-linked devices. 


From ACM TechNews

Communication-Optimal Algorithms For Contracting Distributed Tensors

Communication-Optimal Algorithms For Contracting Distributed Tensors

A new framework derives algorithms for distributed contraction of arbitrary dimensional tensors on the IBM Blue Gene/Q Mira supercomputer.