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subjectHuman Computer Interaction
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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.


Storing Digital Data For Eternity
From ACM News

Storing Digital Data For Eternity

Vint Cerf is sometimes called the "father of the Internet." He helped develop TCP/IP (the communications protocol for the Internet) and later became chairman of...

Technology Doesn't Explain the Philly Train Crash
From ACM News

Technology Doesn't Explain the Philly Train Crash

Cars can now drive by themselves. Automatic pilot systems can fly a jet airliner much of the time. Why is it so hard to make trains that can stop on their own?

Prosthetics That Can Feel, Thanks to the Science of Touch
From ACM News

Prosthetics That Can Feel, Thanks to the Science of Touch

In 2012, Pennsylvania native Jan Scheuermann ate the most satisfying bite of chocolate of her life.

Silicon Valley Is Trying to Make Humans Immortal—and Finding Some Success
From ACM News

Silicon Valley Is Trying to Make Humans Immortal—and Finding Some Success

Peter Thiel, the billionaire co-founder of PayPal, plans to live to be 120. Compared with some other tech billionaires, he doesn't seem particularly ambitious.

Meet Kevin Ashton, Father of the Internet of Things
From ACM Careers

Meet Kevin Ashton, Father of the Internet of Things

The Internet of Things started in the mid-1990s, when a quirky young brand manager in the U.K. puzzled over why a shade of brown lipstick kept disappearing from...

Technology's Latest Quest: Tracking Mental Health
From ACM TechNews

Technology's Latest Quest: Tracking Mental Health

Several teams are working on new ways of determining what elements of behavior or mannerisms could be tracked to monitor a person's mental health. 

Technology's Latest Quest: Tracking Mental Health
From ACM News

Technology's Latest Quest: Tracking Mental Health

You can now count your steps, measure your glucose levels, monitor your blood pressure and track your caloric intake from your phone or high-tech wristband.

Is Emailing Your Brainwaves the Future of Communication?
From ACM News

Is Emailing Your Brainwaves the Future of Communication?

Here's something you probably didn't expect in your inbox: Researchers have now developed a way to email brainwaves.

The $8.5m Race to Protect Planes From Cosmic Rays
From ACM News

The $8.5m Race to Protect Planes From Cosmic Rays

It's an invisible, but looming threat from outer space: distant cosmic events that can cause a computer, or even an aircraft, to crash here on Earth.

Indoor Gps Is the Final Frontier of Personalized Navigation
From ACM News

Indoor Gps Is the Final Frontier of Personalized Navigation

Labs in the U.S. and U.K. are working on next-generation GPS that's so cool, it won't even use satellites.

Repairing the Brain
From ACM News

Repairing the Brain

Will the problem of memory loss one day be forgotten?

Swarm and Fuzzy
From ACM News

Swarm and Fuzzy

When the first human colonists land on Mars several decades from now, their habitat will already be waiting.

Biometric Surveillance Means Someone Is Always Watching
From ACM News

Biometric Surveillance Means Someone Is Always Watching

Incrimination by selfie can happen.

As Military Robots Increase, So Does the Complexity of Their Relationship With Soldiers
From ACM TechNews

As Military Robots Increase, So Does the Complexity of Their Relationship With Soldiers

U.S. military personnel are forming complex emotional ties with robots, in a growing trend that might foreshadow the future of human-robot interactions. 

As Military Robots Increase, So Does the Complexity of Their Relationship With Soldiers
From ACM News

As Military Robots Increase, So Does the Complexity of Their Relationship With Soldiers

For a glimpse at the future of human-robot interactions, it might be better to look at what's happening in the United States military than analyzing Her, in which...

Last Call For Bad Calls
From ACM Opinion

Last Call For Bad Calls

Technology will soon make officials at high-level sports events as obsolete as elevator operators, their skill set as useful as knowing how to make a wood tennis...

The Predictive Power of Big Data
From ACM Opinion

The Predictive Power of Big Data

Right now, the average person's data footprint—the annual amount of data produced worldwide, per capita—is just a little short of one terabyte.

Today, Glasses. Tomorrow, Body Implants?
From ACM News

Today, Glasses. Tomorrow, Body Implants?

Wearable gadgets like smart watches and Google Glass can seem like a fad that has all the durability of CB radios or Duran Duran, but they're important early signs...

Who Needs Humans?
From ACM News

Who Needs Humans?

Amid all the job losses of the Great Recession, there is one category of worker that the economic disruption has been good for: nonhumans.

Mark Zuckerberg's 650 Million Friends (and Counting)
From ACM News

Mark Zuckerberg's 650 Million Friends (and Counting)

Back in June 2009, the globe's potpourri of social-networking sites was dazzlingly diverse: Google's Orkut dominated India and Brazil; Central and South America...
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