acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

News


bg-corner

An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


Google Glass App Identifies You By Your Fashion Sense
From ACM TechNews

Google Glass App Identifies You By Your Fashion Sense

A new human-recognition system designed for the Google Glass platform can recognize people by the clothes they wear. 

The Father of All Men Is 340,000 Years Old
From ACM News

The Father of All Men Is 340,000 Years Old

Albert Perry carried a secret in his DNA: a Y chromosome so distinctive that it reveals new information about the origin of our species.

Happy, Snappy Tweets Gain the Most Twitter Followers
From ACM TechNews

Happy, Snappy Tweets Gain the Most Twitter Followers

The content of tweets, rather than a followers list, that has the biggest impact on the size of a Twitter audience, researchers have found. 

Predict an Oscar Winner By Crunching the Numbers
From ACM TechNews

Predict an Oscar Winner By Crunching the Numbers

Several organizations are using predictive algorithms to try to identify who will take home an Oscar from the upcoming Academy Awards. 

Tongue-Tingling Interface Lets You Taste Data
From ACM TechNews

Tongue-Tingling Interface Lets You Taste Data

A new device called Tongueduino can turn the tongue into a 'display' for output from environmental sensors. 

Crowds Prowl Google Street View to Speed Road Repairs
From ACM TechNews

Crowds Prowl Google Street View to Speed Road Repairs

Software developed by a team at the University of Maryland at College Park makes use of crowdsourcing to report road problems to local governments. 

Why We're Building a 1-Billion Euro Model of a Human Brain
From ACM TechNews

Why We're Building a 1-Billion Euro Model of a Human Brain

A 1-billion euro research prize will be dedicated to the Human Brain Project, aimed at recreating the human brain in a supercomputer to advance neuroscience.

The Computer That Never Crashes
From ACM TechNews

The Computer That Never Crashes

University College London researchers have created what they describe as a self-repairing computer that could keep mission-critical systems working. 

Robot Inquisition Keeps Witnesses on the Right Track
From ACM TechNews

Robot Inquisition Keeps Witnesses on the Right Track

Researchers are developing robots to help solve the misinformation effect, remembering events differently depending on how one is asked.

Mind-Meld Brain Power Is Best For Steering Spaceships
From ACM TechNews

Mind-Meld Brain Power Is Best For Steering Spaceships

University of Essex researchers have developed a simulator in which pairs of brain-computer interface (BCI) users had to steer a craft toward the exact center of...

Data Waves Keep Your Wearable Tech in Tune
From ACM TechNews

Data Waves Keep Your Wearable Tech in Tune

A new wireless technique that uses a phenomenon known as Zenneck surface waves could permit wearable technology products to communicate with each other.  

Bandwidth-Sharing App Brings Connectivity to All
From ACM TechNews

Bandwidth-Sharing App Brings Connectivity to All

Eyal Toledano of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has developed AirMobs, an app that would allow smartphone owners to share their mobile Internet connections...

Ford's Open-Source Kit Brings Era of Smart Car Apps
From ACM TechNews

Ford's Open-Source Kit Brings Era of Smart Car Apps

Ford Motor Co. recently released OpenXC, an open source hardware and software toolkit that will allow the hacker community to experiment with the computer systems...

Kinect Sensor Poised to Leap Into Everyday Life
From ACM News

Kinect Sensor Poised to Leap Into Everyday Life

When Microsoft's Kinect gaming sensor first exploded onto the gaming scene in 2010, it wasn't long before people started getting excited about what it might make...

Mapping Malware's Genome to Fight Future Attacks
From ACM News

Mapping Malware's Genome to Fight Future Attacks

Every year a computer worm emerges to stalk the Internet, each one seemingly bigger and badder than the last (see diagram).

Silent Skype Calls Can Hide Secret Messages
From ACM News

Silent Skype Calls Can Hide Secret Messages

Got a secret message to send? Say it with silence.

'pinch-and-Paste' App Boosts Your Interior Design Skills
From ACM TechNews

'pinch-and-Paste' App Boosts Your Interior Design Skills

An augmented reality app could one day enable tablets and smartphones to show how a living room would look like with a tiger-print shag-pile carpet or other modifications...

Warning, Speedsters: You Can't Fool Quantum Radar
From ACM News

Warning, Speedsters: You Can't Fool Quantum Radar

Is it a bird, a plane, or a speeding car?

Touchpad Steering Wheel Keeps Eyes on the Road
From ACM TechNews

Touchpad Steering Wheel Keeps Eyes on the Road

Intel researchers have developed a touch-sensitive steering wheel that enables drivers to call up information that is displayed on the windshield.

'biology Is a Manufacturing Capability'
From ACM Opinion

'biology Is a Manufacturing Capability'

Soon we'll be able to engineer living things with mechanical precision, says Tom Knight, father of synthetic biology.
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account