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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 2018


From ACM News

This Military Tech Could Finally Help Self-Driving Cars Master Snow

This Military Tech Could Finally Help Self-Driving Cars Master Snow

The research conducted at the country's National Laboratories is usually highly classified and specifically aimed at solving national security problems. But sometimes you get a swords-into-ploughshares moment.


From ACM TechNews

Mobile App Extends Smartphone Battery 10-25%

Mobile App Extends Smartphone Battery 10-25%

Researchers at the University of Waterloo in Canada have developed a mobile app that purportedly reduces the energy consumption of Android smartphones.


From ACM TechNews

Google Just Gave Control Over Data Center Cooling to an AI

Google Just Gave Control Over Data Center Cooling to an AI

Google says the cooling systems of several of its data centers are now governed by an artificial intelligence algorithm.


From ACM TechNews

Low Bandwidth? ­se More Colors at Once

Low Bandwidth? ­se More Colors at Once

A team of researchers has simplified the manufacturing process enabling the utilization of multiple colors simultaneously on an electronic chip instead of one color at a time.


From ACM News

Out-doctoring the Doctors

Out-doctoring the Doctors

Artificial software can outperform human doctors at reading medical imaging.


From ACM Careers

As Cars Collect More Data, Companies Try to Move It All Faster

As Cars Collect More Data, Companies Try to Move It All Faster

Cars need to get faster—not on the road, but on the inside.


From ACM TechNews

AI Has a Racial Bias Problem. Google Is Funding Summer Camps to Try to Change That

AI Has a Racial Bias Problem. Google Is Funding Summer Camps to Try to Change That

The Oakland, CA-based nonprofit AI4All will use a $1-million grant from Google.org to broaden its outreach to young underrepresented minorities and women.


From ACM TechNews

Crowdsourcing Algorithms to Predict Epileptic Seizures

Crowdsourcing Algorithms to Predict Epileptic Seizures

More than 10,000 crowdsourced algorithms can enable clinically relevant epileptic seizure prediction across a broad spectrum of patients.


From ACM TechNews

Robots Have Power to Significantly Influence Children's Opinions

Robots Have Power to Significantly Influence Children's Opinions

Researchers have demonstrated that young children are much more susceptible than adults to having their opinions and decisions influenced by robots.


From ACM TechNews

A Twist in Graphene Could Make for Tunable Electronic Devices

A Twist in Graphene Could Make for Tunable Electronic Devices

Researchers have demonstrated proof of principle for a method of controlling graphene's rotation and the dynamic variance of its electrical, optical, and mechanical properties.


From ACM TechNews

LiveTag Is Out to Make Dumb Objects Smart

LiveTag Is Out to Make Dumb Objects Smart

University of California, San Diego researchers are developing a Wi-Fi-based system using inexpensive tags that can be stuck to everyday non-electronic objects.


From ACM TechNews

Transistor Technology May Improve Speed, Battery Life for Computers, Mobile Phones, Other Electronics

Transistor Technology May Improve Speed, Battery Life for Computers, Mobile Phones, Other Electronics

Purdue University researchers have developed a technology design for field effect transistors that incorporates lasers.


From ACM News

How to Make a Robot ­se Theory of Mind

How to Make a Robot ­se Theory of Mind

Imagine standing in an elevator as the doors begin to close and suddenly seeing a couple at the end of the corridor running toward you.


From ACM News

Six Things About Opportunity's Recovery Efforts

Six Things About Opportunity's Recovery Efforts

NASA's Opportunity rover has been silent since June 10, when a planet-encircling dust storm cut off solar power for the nearly-15-year-old rover.


From ACM Careers

The 'Neuropolitics' Consultants Who Hack Voters' Brains

The 'Neuropolitics' Consultants Who Hack Voters' Brains

Maria Pocovi slides her laptop over to me with the webcam switched on.


From ACM TechNews

Rethinking Social Networks

Rethinking Social Networks

The WBPA (Weighted Betweenness Preferential Attachment) model developed at Carnegie Mellon University shows how social networks change and develop over time.


From ACM TechNews

Researchers Study Disparities in STEM Career Aspirations for ­nderrepresented Students

Researchers Study Disparities in STEM Career Aspirations for ­nderrepresented Students

Researchers measured the sociodemographic disparities and changes in career aspirations in STEM fields among U.S. high school students.


From ACM TechNews

Common Wi-Fi Can Detect Weapons, Bombs, and Chemicals in Bags

Common Wi-Fi Can Detect Weapons, Bombs, and Chemicals in Bags

Rutgers University-New Brunswick researchers found common Wi-Fi technology can easily identify weapons, bombs, and explosive chemicals in bags at public venues.


From ACM TechNews

Oracle Open-Sources Graphpipe to Make It Easier to Deploy Machine Learning Models

Oracle Open-Sources Graphpipe to Make It Easier to Deploy Machine Learning Models

Oracle has released an open-source tool called Graphpipe to facilitate the deployment of machine learning models.


From ACM TechNews

Replacing Your Boss With a Cruel Robot Could Make You Concentrate More

Replacing Your Boss With a Cruel Robot Could Make You Concentrate More

A mean robot could motivate human employees to improve their cognitive performance, compared to supervision by a friendly robot or no robot supervision, researchers say.


From ACM News

How ­npaywall Is Transforming Open Science

How ­npaywall Is Transforming Open Science

After being kicked out of a hotel conference room where they had participated in a three-day open-science workshop and hackathon, a group of computer scientists simply moved to an adjacent hallway.


From ACM News

Settling Arguments About Hydrogen With 168 Giant Lasers

Settling Arguments About Hydrogen With 168 Giant Lasers

With gentle pulses from gigantic lasers, scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California transformed hydrogen into droplets of shiny liquid metal.


From ACM News

Automating Negotiation

Automating Negotiation

Computers are starting to outperform the average human at negotiation.


From ACM TechNews

Nvidia ­nveils Real-Time Ray Tracing Turing Graphics Architecture

Nvidia ­nveils Real-Time Ray Tracing Turing Graphics Architecture

Nvidia says it has "reinvented computer graphics" with its Turing graphics-processing unit architecture, which will serve as the platform for a new GPU family that focuses on real-time ray tracing.


From ACM TechNews

­niversal Method to Sort Complex Information Found

­niversal Method to Sort Complex Information Found

A multi-institution team of computer scientists has clarified the first general-purpose method of solving nearest neighbor question for complex data.


From ACM News

To Get Ready for Robot Driving, Some Want to Reprogram Pedestrians

To Get Ready for Robot Driving, Some Want to Reprogram Pedestrians

You're crossing the street wrong.


From ACM News

LHC Physicists Embrace Brute-Force Approach to Particle Hunt

LHC Physicists Embrace Brute-Force Approach to Particle Hunt

A once-controversial approach to particle physics has entered the mainstream at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).


From ACM News

Wi-Fi Could Be ­sed to Detect Weapons and Bombs

Wi-Fi Could Be ­sed to Detect Weapons and Bombs

Wireless signals can penetrate bags to measure the dimensions of metal objects or estimate the volume of liquids, researchers claim.


From ACM TechNews

How a Computer Learns to Dribble: Practice, Practice, Practice

How a Computer Learns to Dribble: Practice, Practice, Practice

Researchers have developed a physics-based, real-time method for controlling animated characters that can learn basketball dribbling skills from experience.


From ACM TechNews

Quantum Chains in Graphene Nanoribbons

Quantum Chains in Graphene Nanoribbons

Researchers at Empa and the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research have succeeded in adjusting the electronic properties of graphene nanoribbons by varying their shape, a process that could generate specific local quantum …