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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.

September 2010


From ACM TechNews

Shape-Shifting Robot Compensates For Damaged Limb

Shape-Shifting Robot Compensates For Damaged Limb

European roboticists have developed software that enables a modular robot to adapt when one part stops working. 


From ACM News

Google Speeds Queries With 'instant' Results

Those who find Google’s search engine to be impossibly slow will welcome Google Instant, an upgrade to the company’s search results that it unveiled Wednesday.


From ACM TechNews

Searching For STEM Success

Rural community colleges (CCs) have recently done much better than urban and suburban CCs in the percentage increase of associate degrees awarded to women and minorities in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)…


From ACM TechNews

ITU Head: Cyberwar Could Be 'Worse Than Tsunami'

ITU Head: Cyberwar Could Be 'Worse Than Tsunami'

There needs to be a global cybersecurity peace treaty to avert the threat of international cyberwar, whose effects would be more devastating than a tsunami, says International Telecommunications Union Secretary-General Hamadoun…


From ACM TechNews

New Process Promises to Revolutionize Manufacturing of Products

University of Waterloo scientists have developed Multiple Memory Material Technology, a new manufacturing process that they say makes smart materials even smarter. 


From ACM TechNews

HTML5 May Help Web Pages Talk, Listen

HTML5 May Help Web Pages Talk, Listen

A new World Wide Web Consortium project could lead to the incorporation of voice recognition and speech synthesis interfaces within Web pages.  


From ACM TechNews

Scientists Develop Device to Enable Improved Global Data Transmission

University of Southampton researchers have developed a data transmission system that could benefit optical communications networks by eliminating phase noise from optical amplifiers and cross talk induced by rogue signals. 


From ACM News

Future Technology in the NFL

In the years ahead, the National Football League looks set to dial up some new tech blitzes that will make the game fairer and safer. Among the technologies most likely to make it onto the field soon are wireless sensors in…


From ACM News

The Human Process Behind Google's Algorithm

The Human Process Behind Google's Algorithm

Google is famous for evangelizing the power of the algorithm. It spends less time talking about the several hundred human beings who influence its algorithm.


From ACM News

Texas Ag Probing Google's Searches

The Texas attorney general's office is conducting an antitrust review of Google Inc.'s core search-engine business, a sign of widening government scrutiny of the Web giant.


From ACM News

Once a Dynamo, the Tech Sector Is Slow to Hire

For years the technology sector has been considered the most dynamic, promising and globally envied industry in the United States. It escaped the recession relatively unscathed, and profits this year have been soaring.


From ACM News

Study Confirms Wireless Computers Effective During Class

A recent Columbus State University study shows that students who consistently use laptops with interaction software to enhance or supplement their classroom notes outperform their counterparts.


From ACM TechNews

Dental Surgery at the Click of a Mouse

Dental Surgery at the Click of a Mouse

Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz researchers have developed an e-learning platform that enables dentistry students to download case studies with videos and images showing disease patterns and surgical procedures directly to…


From ACM News

A Strong Password Isn't the Strongest Security

A Strong Password Isn't the Strongest Security

Make your password strong, with a unique jumble of letters, numbers and punctuation marks. But memorize it—never write it down. And, oh yes, change it every few months. These instructions are supposed to protect us. But they…


From ACM TechNews

Iphone App May Replace Stethoscope

Iphone App May Replace Stethoscope

iPhones can function as stethoscopes using a new application developed by a University College of London computer scientist and cardiologist researchers. The app allows users to listen to heartbeats, and displays the heat waveform…


From ACM News

Marc Andreessen Flexes His Muscles in Silicon Valley

Marc Andreessen Flexes His Muscles in Silicon Valley

He spoke for Hewlett-Packard's board when it showed ex-CEO Mark Hurd the door—and is now part of the team searching for Hurd's successor. He played a role in eBay's spinoff of Skype—buying a $50 million chunk in the process…


From ACM News

Massive Online Networks to be Focus of Study of Creative Collaborations

Massive Online Networks to be Focus of Study of Creative Collaborations

Using two creative online communities as their laboratory, two Indiana University Bloomington researchers hope to understand how the inner workings of such massive, networked collaborations could benefit scientists, corporations…


From ACM News

Two Years On, Chrome Reshapes Browser Market

Two Years On, Chrome Reshapes Browser Market

It's been two years since the first public version of Chrome appeared, but in some ways, Google's browser remains a novelty.


From ACM News

Cern Collides with a Patent Reality

You might imagine that vast patent royalties flow into the organisation that invented the touchscreen and the World Wide Web. But the atom-smashing outfit CERN, cradle of both these technologies, doesn't make a bean from either…


From ACM News

Some Newspapers, Tracking Readers Online, Shift Coverage

Some Newspapers, Tracking Readers Online, Shift Coverage

In most businesses, not knowing how well a particular product is performing would be almost unthinkable. But newspapers have always been a peculiar business, one that has stubbornly, proudly clung to a sense that focusing…


From ACM News

Scientists Decode Words from Brain Signals

Scientists Decode Words from Brain Signals

In an early step toward turning the thoughts of severely paralyzed people into digitized speech, University of Utah researchers translated brain signals into words using two grids of 16 microelectrodes implanted beneath the…


From ICT Results

Electronic Nose Sniffs Out Bacteria

Electronic Nose Sniffs Out Bacteria

Early treatment of infection in burn patients is critical. A European consortium has designed a point-of-care instrument that can identify types of bacteria from the tiny amounts of volatile gases they emit.


From ACM News

Bringing Engineering to K-12 Classrooms

Bringing Engineering to K-12 Classrooms

With support from the U.S. National Science Foundation, engineers from Tufts University are bringing engineering to young students through STOMP, the Student Teacher Outreach Mentorship Program.


From ACM News

Computer Scientists Leverage Dark Silicon to Improve Smartphone Battery Life

A new smartphone chip prototype under development at the University of California, San Diego will improve smartphone efficiency by making use of "dark silicon"—the underused transistors in modern microprocessors.


From ACM News

How to Remake Life

How to Remake Life

Venter Institute researchers have made the first viable cell with a synthetic genome.


From ACM TechNews

How Coders Can Help Fight Climate Change

How Coders Can Help Fight Climate Change

University of Toronto professor Steve Easterbrook has issued a research paper in which he outlines how software engineers can help climate scientists build computer models for projecting climate change. 


From ACM TechNews

Researchers Create Robot That Can Pair, Fold Socks

Researchers Create Robot That Can Pair, Fold Socks

University of California, Berkeley researchers have developed a robot that can pair and fold socks. The robot can determine whether a sock is inside out based on its texture, flipping it if necessary and pairing it with its…


From ACM TechNews

FCC Seeks More Input on Wireless Internet Rules

FCC Seeks More Input on Wireless Internet Rules

The FCC recently asked for more feedback regarding whether regulations should apply to wireless Internet service, adding months of debate on the subject. The FCC also is asking for input about special services that offer to…


From ACM News

How Internet Growth Is Playing Out in Top Emerging Markets

How Internet Growth Is Playing Out in Top Emerging Markets

The number of Internet users in the top emerging markets is set to nearly double by 2015—a pace of growth that sounds enticing but that actually presents plenty of challenges for businesses, according to a Boston Consulting…


From ACM News

Season For High Science

Season For High Science

Hurricanes on both coasts are test beds for new forecasting tools.