acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

News


Latest News News Archive Refine your search:
subjectSoftware
authorScience
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.


Alien Life Could Feed on Cosmic Rays
From ACM News

Alien Life Could Feed on Cosmic Rays

A bizarre microbe found deep in a gold mine in South Africa could provide a model for how life might survive in seemingly uninhabitable environments through the...

Quantum Teleportation Was Just Achieved Over More Than 7 Km of City Fibre
From ACM News

Quantum Teleportation Was Just Achieved Over More Than 7 Km of City Fibre

Quantum teleportation just moved out of the lab and into the real world, with two independent teams of scientists successfully sending quantum information across...

It's Official: You're Lost in a Directionless ­niverse
From ACM News

It's Official: You're Lost in a Directionless ­niverse

Ever peer into the night sky and wonder whether space is really the same in all directions or if the cosmos might be whirling about like a vast top?

Robots Could Hack Turing Test By Keeping Silent
From ACM News

Robots Could Hack Turing Test By Keeping Silent

The Turing test, the quintessential evaluation designed to determine if something is a computer or a human, may have a fatal flaw, new research suggests.

A Bug in Fmri Software Could Invalidate 15 Years of Brain Research
From ACM TechNews

A Bug in Fmri Software Could Invalidate 15 Years of Brain Research

The past 15 years of human brain research could be invalidated by a recently discovered bug in functional magnetic resonance imaging software.

The Gene Editor Crispr Won't Fully Fix Sick People Anytime Soon. Here's Why
From ACM News

The Gene Editor Crispr Won't Fully Fix Sick People Anytime Soon. Here's Why

This week, scientists will gather in Washington, D.C., for an annual meeting devoted to gene therapy—a long-struggling field that has clawed its way back to respectability...

Soldier Shoots Down Drone with Cyber Rifle at Defense Secretary's Feet
From ACM News

Soldier Shoots Down Drone with Cyber Rifle at Defense Secretary's Feet

A coding (but not smoking) gun.

Our Hidden Neandertal Dna May Increase Risk of Allergies, Depression
From ACM News

Our Hidden Neandertal Dna May Increase Risk of Allergies, Depression

Depressed? Your inner Neandertal may be to blame.

The Most Likely Spots for Life in the Milky Way
From ACM News

The Most Likely Spots for Life in the Milky Way

Our home galaxy isn't as hospitable to life as you might think.

Sensors May Soon Give Prosthetics a Lifelike Sense of Touch
From ACM News

Sensors May Soon Give Prosthetics a Lifelike Sense of Touch

Prosthetic limbs may work wonders for restoring lost function in some amputees, but one thing they can't do is restore an accurate sense of touch.

Obama Orders Effort to Build First Exascale Computer
From ACM Opinion

Obama Orders Effort to Build First Exascale Computer

The United States is now committed to building an exascale computer, some 30 times more powerful than today’s top machine.

Collaboratively Exploring Virtual Worlds
From ACM TechNews

Collaboratively Exploring Virtual Worlds

The Pentagon's Office of Force Readiness and Training, Lockheed Martin, and the National Science Foundation are creating a platform for immersive training. 

How Computers Can Teach Themselves to Recognize Cats
From ACM News

How Computers Can Teach Themselves to Recognize Cats

In June 2012, a network of 16,000 computers trained itself to recognize a cat by looking at 10 million images from YouTube videos. Today, the technique is used...

Is the ­niverse a Hologram?
From ACM News

Is the ­niverse a Hologram?

At first glance, there is not the slightest doubt: to us, the universe looks three dimensional. But one of the most fruitful theories of theoretical physics in...

Hoax-Detecting Software Spots Fake Papers
From ACM TechNews

Hoax-Detecting Software Spots Fake Papers

Software programs that generate nonsense computer science papers have become sources of embarrassment for major academic publishers.

One Thousand Genes You Could Live Without
From ACM News

One Thousand Genes You Could Live Without

Researchers have unveiled the largest ever set of full genomes from a single population: Iceland.

Have We Found Alien Life?
From ACM News

Have We Found Alien Life?

Kenneth Nealson is looking awfully sane for a man who’s basically just told me that he has a colony of aliens incubating in his laboratory.

This Computer Knows When to Hold 'em, Knows When to Fold 'em
From ACM News

This Computer Knows When to Hold 'em, Knows When to Fold 'em

Card sharks, beware. A new program cannot be beaten at a variety of poker called heads-up limit Texas Hold 'em—at least in a human lifetime—a team of computer scientists...

Sciserver: Big Data Infrastructure For Science
From ACM TechNews

Sciserver: Big Data Infrastructure For Science

Researchers are adapting tools developed for massive astronomy data sets into online big data storage and analytics tools that can be used across scientific disciplines...

European Genetic Identity May Stretch Back 36,000 Years
From ACM News

European Genetic Identity May Stretch Back 36,000 Years

Europeans carry a motley mix of genes from at least three ancient sources: indigenous hunter-gatherers within Europe, people from the Middle East, and northwest...
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account