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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.


Clues Suggest Malware Is Moving from Pcs to Mobile Devices
From ACM News

Clues Suggest Malware Is Moving from Pcs to Mobile Devices

The fact that smartphones and tablets don't need antivirus software or regular software updates is a major reason for their popularity.

Graphene Antennas Would Enable Terabit Wireless Downloads
From ACM TechNews

Graphene Antennas Would Enable Terabit Wireless Downloads

A proposed wireless antenna made from graphene could enable terabit-per-second transfer speeds at short ranges. 

Mobile Computing Is Just Getting Started
From ACM Opinion

Mobile Computing Is Just Getting Started

Mobile computers are spreading faster than any other consumer technology in history.

Autopsy of a Dead Social Network
From ACM Careers

Autopsy of a Dead Social Network

Friendster is a social network that was founded in 2002, a year before Myspace and two years before Facebook.

Stanford Researchers Build Complex Circuits Made of Carbon Nanotubes
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Researchers Build Complex Circuits Made of Carbon Nanotubes

Stanford University researchers say they have developed one of the most complex carbon nanotube circuits to date. 

Braess' Paradox Infects Social Networks Too, Say Computer Scientists
From ACM TechNews

Braess' Paradox Infects Social Networks Too, Say Computer Scientists

The paradox that adding extra roads to a network can lead to greater congestion, may be seen in social networks, too.  

Exposé of Chinese Data Thieves Reveals Sloppy Tactics
From ACM News

Exposé of Chinese Data Thieves Reveals Sloppy Tactics

A beige office block in Shanghai's suburbs belonging to the Chinese army became world famous on Tuesday after Mandiant, a Washington-based computer security company...

Moshers, Heavy Metal and Emergent Behavior
From ACM TechNews

Moshers, Heavy Metal and Emergent Behavior

Researchers say the collective movement of concert-goers in a mosh pit is mathematically similar to that of a disordered 2-D gas. 

Welcome to the Malware-Industrial Complex
From ACM News

Welcome to the Malware-Industrial Complex

Every summer, computer security experts get together in Las Vegas for Black Hat and DEFCON, conferences that have earned notoriety for presentations demonstrating...

How 'bullet Time' Will Revolutionize Exascale Computing
From ACM TechNews

How 'bullet Time' Will Revolutionize Exascale Computing

A new method for compressing output data without losing its essential features in exascale computing is based on a Hollywood special effects technique. 

The Browser Wars Go Mobile
From ACM News

The Browser Wars Go Mobile

When surfing the Web on a smartphone, most of us stick with the browser that came with our handset.

Does Gestural Computing Break Fitts' Law?
From ACM TechNews

Does Gestural Computing Break Fitts' Law?

In an interview, Francisco Inchauste, a senior user experience designer for Universal Mind, discusses whether Fitts' Law is still relevant in a post-graphical user...

How to Build a Nanotube Computer
From ACM TechNews

How to Build a Nanotube Computer

IBM researchers have assembled 10,000 carbon nanotube transistors on a silicon chip, which they say is a breakthrough that could lead to a new way of producingView...

From ACM News

Software Predicts Tomorrow's News By Analyzing Today's and Yesterday's

Researchers have created software that predicts when and where disease outbreaks might occur based on two decades of New York Times articles and other online data...

An Internet For Manufacturing
From ACM News

An Internet For Manufacturing

What is the industrial Internet?

Intel's New Interface Idea Is a Mash-up of All the Others
From ACM News

Intel's New Interface Idea Is a Mash-up of All the Others

At this year's Consumer Electronics Show, chipmaker Intel demoed its latest big idea: "perceptual computing."

Ar Goggles Restore Depth Perception to People Blind in One Eye
From ACM TechNews

Ar Goggles Restore Depth Perception to People Blind in One Eye

Augmented reality (AR) glasses that offer a feeling of binocular depth perception to people who are blind in one eye are under development at the University of...

The Algorithms That Automatically Date Medieval Manuscripts
From ACM TechNews

The Algorithms That Automatically Date Medieval Manuscripts

University of Toronto researchers have developed statistical computer techniques for dating historical documents.  

The Underdog Operating Systems Set to Shake Up the Smartphone Scene
From ACM News

The Underdog Operating Systems Set to Shake Up the Smartphone Scene

The next time you go shopping for a smartphone, you might see some unfamiliar software on the screens lining store shelves.

Humans Generate Most of the World’s Data, but Machines Are Catching Up
From ACM TechNews

Humans Generate Most of the World’s Data, but Machines Are Catching Up

IDC estimated in 2005 that all of the bytes in the digital universe amounted to 130 billion gigabytes. IDC's most recent estimate for 2012 put the total at 2.8...
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