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dateMore Than a Year Ago
subjectData / Storage And Retrieval
authorNewsweek
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An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


Black Hole Hunters: Q&A With Katie Bouman
From ACM Opinion

Black Hole Hunters: Q&A With Katie Bouman

Scientists have revealed the first-ever image of a black hole. The picture is the result of a global collaboration in which scientists linked together telescopes...

NASA Reveals Aliens Could Have Already Visited Earth
From ACM News

NASA Reveals Aliens Could Have Already Visited Earth

A NASA scientist suggested that aliens may have already visited earth but evaded detection due to their appearances being vastly different from human expectations...

You Will Be Replaced. Here's How
From ACM News

You Will Be Replaced. Here's How

Route 9 skims by Boston and cuts clear across Massachusetts to Pittsfield, a city of roughly 50,000, the largest in Berkshire County.

Scientists Create a 'Social Network of Brains'
From ACM News

Scientists Create a 'Social Network of Brains'

Sending your thoughts directly into someone else's brain may seem like the stuff of science fiction. But this capability could be closer to reality than you think...

Scientists Hope Artificial Stupidity Could Save Humans
From ACM News

Scientists Hope Artificial Stupidity Could Save Humans

Some scientists are suggesting limiting how smart artificial intelligence can get—all the way down to human intelligence.

This Is the Brightest Early ­niverse Object Ever Seen
From ACM News

This Is the Brightest Early ­niverse Object Ever Seen

A galaxy spinning around a hungry supermassive black hole that's guzzling down matter and shooting out plasma jets has grabbed the attention of astronomers 13 billion...

Are We Alone in the ­niverse?
From ACM News

Are We Alone in the ­niverse?

Say goodbye to ET, Marvin the Martian and Yoda. Humans are probably the only intelligent life in the universe, researchers from the University of Oxford have reported...

Colliding Wormholes May Be Causing Gravitational Waves
From ACM News

Colliding Wormholes May Be Causing Gravitational Waves

One of the most significant scientific developments of recent times has been the five separate observations of the elusive ripples in space-time known as gravitational...

New Horizons Is Awake Again to Fly by Distant Object
From ACM News

New Horizons Is Awake Again to Fly by Distant Object

A nice nap always makes a long journey more bearable—and that's even more true when the journey covers billions of miles.

Dark Galaxies Could Explain How Stars Are Formed
From ACM News

Dark Galaxies Could Explain How Stars Are Formed

Scientists may have identified up to six "dark galaxies," a finding that could help solve the mystery of how stars and galaxies are created.

Editing Memories and Sensations in the Brain With Tech
From ACM News

Editing Memories and Sensations in the Brain With Tech

What if we had the ability to fool our brain into thinking that we'd experienced something that never happened?

What's Behind Russia's New Internet Crackdown
From ACM News

What's Behind Russia's New Internet Crackdown

China has its own great firewall. Turkey has been blocking swaths of the internet, including YouTube, for at least a decade.

Is This the Sound of Black Holes Colliding?
From ACM News

Is This the Sound of Black Holes Colliding?

Take a deep breath, put on your headphones and watch the video above. You're about to hear something truly astronomical: the sound of two black holes smashing together...

Mercury in Retrograde Now, Stumping Scientists Always
From ACM News

Mercury in Retrograde Now, Stumping Scientists Always

Until April 15, here's a convenient excuse for any troubles in your life: It's all the fault of a quirk of the planetary dance that constantly unfolds across our...

China: Police ­sing Facial-Recognition Sunglasses
From ACM News

China: Police ­sing Facial-Recognition Sunglasses

The Chinese government is equipping its police with real-time facial-recognition sunglasses to instantly locate criminals in crowds.

Speed of Light Could Be Dropped to Zero ­sing Crystals
From ACM News

Speed of Light Could Be Dropped to Zero ­sing Crystals

In a vacuum like space, the speed of light is just over 186,280 miles per second. Scientists have now shown it's possible to slow it down to zero miles per second...

New Nasa Cassini Image of Saturn Moon Has a Surprise
From ACM News

New Nasa Cassini Image of Saturn Moon Has a Surprise

Usually, the postcards stop after a journey ends, but not so for robotic adventurer Cassini, whose epic journey exploring Saturn and its neighbors finished in September...

Artificial Intelligence Will Be a Human Jobs Creator
From ACM Careers

Artificial Intelligence Will Be a Human Jobs Creator

In 2013, James "Jimi" Crawford founded a company called Orbital Insight, barely noticed at the time amid the Silicon Valley froth.

Can We Make a Hack-Proof Internet with Quantum Physics?
From ACM News

Can We Make a Hack-Proof Internet with Quantum Physics?

Is it possible to build a network that's impossible to hack? Quantum physicists believe it might.

Wormholes Join Black Holes By Quantum Teleportation
From ACM News

Wormholes Join Black Holes By Quantum Teleportation

A century after wormholes were first theorized, scientists have posited that passages through space-time can be traversed using a special quantum connection between...
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