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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.


Taking the Reins of AI
From ACM News

Taking the Reins of AI

A new report calls for the U.S. government to watch, encourage, and regulate (where necessary) artificial intelligence.  

Overcoming AI Bias with AI Fairness
From ACM News

Overcoming AI Bias with AI Fairness

New tools aim to remove unconscious and other types of bias from algorithms.

Quantum Clouds Leap Ahead
From ACM News

Quantum Clouds Leap Ahead

D-Wave offers access to a cloud-based quantum application environment.

IBM Boasts Single-Atom Two-Bit Memory
From ACM News

IBM Boasts Single-Atom Two-Bit Memory

This accomplishment will feed research on developing atomic-scale devices for storing digital bits, and the storage of quantum bits in the magnetic spin of atomic...

The Outlook for Superconducting Computers
From ACM News

The Outlook for Superconducting Computers

Will superconductors outrace silicon?     

Learning to ­se Data Better
From ACM News

Learning to ­se Data Better

Using artificial intelligence to process medical sensor data can have great impact on health-related costs and outcomes.  

How Software Enabled the Thai Cave Rescue
From ACM News

How Software Enabled the Thai Cave Rescue

Software-defined radios allowed the rescuers to communicate, when simple radio technology could not.

AI Helps Doctors U­se Data Better
From ACM News

AI Helps Doctors U­se Data Better

Using artificial intelligence to process medical sensor data can have a significant impact on health-related costs and outcomes.  

Bespoke Additive Manufacturing
From ACM News

Bespoke Additive Manufacturing

Three-dimensional printing tailors item to order, even body parts.

 Not Quite Quantum Computing
From ACM News

Not Quite Quantum Computing

Fujitsu says its "Quantum-Inspired" Digital Annealing is capable of tackling combinatorial optimization problems.

 RoboFly On the Wall?
From ACM News

RoboFly On the Wall?

The future of insect-sized remote-controlled aerial robots will be electromechanical, rather than cyborg.

3D Printing for the ­.S. Navy
From ACM News

3D Printing for the ­.S. Navy

 The world's largest navy explores the use of additive manufacturing for spare parts, with an eye toward eventually building ships that way. 

Fear of Job Loss to Automation Hurts Productivity
From ACM News

Fear of Job Loss to Automation Hurts Productivity

Fear of job loss due to automation, combined with confusion over which skill sets one will be needed to be employable in the future, is affecting worker health...

Are Human Brains Quantum Computers?
From ACM News

Are Human Brains Quantum Computers?

Research project could explain how memory, and the brain's biology, works.

The Search for ­niversal Memory
From ACM News

The Search for ­niversal Memory

The search for a universal memory is aimed at ultimately replacing the entire computer memory hierarchy with a single technology.

Brain-Emulating Chips Get Smarter, Smaller, More Efficient
From ACM News

Brain-Emulating Chips Get Smarter, Smaller, More Efficient

Neuromorphic chips manage "many cores" by connecting artificial neurons with artificial neurons, mirroring how human brains operate.

Do Computers Really Think?
From ACM News

Do Computers Really Think?

Do smart assistants exhibit actual intelligence?

The Quantum Computer Era Arrives
From ACM News

The Quantum Computer Era Arrives

The drive to develop and commercialize the first quantum computer has been characterized as the new arms race.

Evolutionary Programming Converts Darwinism Into Algorithms
From ACM News

Evolutionary Programming Converts Darwinism Into Algorithms

Evolutionary computation strategies include a multitude of biologically inspired algorithms for optimizing problems, often those with too many variables to compare...

Non-Von Neumann Computers Providing Brain-Like Functionality
From ACM News

Non-Von Neumann Computers Providing Brain-Like Functionality

By 2020, the reign of the von Neumann architecture will begin fading away after 75 years of dominance.
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