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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.


Graphene Competitor ­sed to Make Circuits
From ACM TechNews

Graphene Competitor ­sed to Make Circuits

The first logic circuits made using atom-thick sheets of molybdenite suggest the material could be an alternative to graphene as a possible solution to the problem...

From ACM News

Shrunken Servers Aim For a Greener Internet

As the cloud becomes more pervasive—driving everything from social networking to mobile apps—the computers that power it must guzzle more and more energy.

Smallest-Ever Nanotube Transistors Outperform Silicon
From ACM TechNews

Smallest-Ever Nanotube Transistors Outperform Silicon

IBM researchers have developed a nine-nanometer carbon-nanotube transistor that performs better than any other transistor at its size.  

From ACM News

Europe's Driverless Car (driver Still Required)

Tucked away in the basement of an iconic office tower shaped like four engine cylinders, engineer Werner Huber is telling me about the joy of driving.

From ACM News

Automobile Design for the Connected Age

Car design is in a state of flux. The designer's job used to be about tail fins and chrome. Then it was all about cup holders and plastics.

From ACM News

Bouncing Data Would Speed Up Data Centers

Inside the huge data centers operated by Internet companies like Google, Amazon, and Facebook, information is processed at blistering speed, but it still has to...

How the 10,000-Year Clock Measures Time
From ACM News

How the 10,000-Year Clock Measures Time

Ten thousand years is about the age of civilisation. Archaeologists have a few relics that have spanned this period, mostly stone tools and works of art. But...

From ACM News

Quantum Computing with Holograms

Light is one of the most promising carriers of quantum information. It is robust against decoherence because it does not interact with stray electric and magnetic...

From ACM News

5 Disruptive Technologies Happening Now

From e-books to 3D printing, these technologies are destroying markets and creating new ones.

Does Apple's Siri Threaten Google's Search Monopoly?
From ACM News

Does Apple's Siri Threaten Google's Search Monopoly?

The future of search may look a little like Kirsten Goldenberg, a 14-year-old high-school student in Los Angeles. When she needs help with a homework problem,...

From ACM News

Will the Kinect 2 Be Able to Read Your Lips?

How will users hack this one? The Kinect is a device that inherently grows and expands: Microsoft itself has come around to acknowledging that the oft-hackedreally...

IBM Makes Revolutionary Racetrack Memory Using Existing Tools
From ACM TechNews

IBM Makes Revolutionary Racetrack Memory Using Existing Tools

IBM researchers have developed the first prototype of racetrack computer memory, which combines on one chip all of the components needed to read, store, and write...

From ACM News

How Games Are Driving a Mobile Graphics Revolution

The needs of players are helping to push advances from chip makers like Qualcomm and Nvidia.

From ACM News

Gestural Interfaces Go Mainstream

Starting with the handheld controllers introduced by the Nintendo Wii console in 2006, gamers have been able to control computers by making gestures in the air...

A New Chapter For E-Books
From ACM News

A New Chapter For E-Books

The problem with the Harry Potter series, for me and many others, was that it had to end.

Researchers Couple Printed Logic With Printed Memory
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Couple Printed Logic With Printed Memory

Transistors have been combined with memory in a printed electronic device that offers an affordable way to read, write, and process small amounts of data by Palo...

Mouthpieces Gather Impact Data from Football Players
From ACM News

Mouthpieces Gather Impact Data from Football Players

Stanford researchers think the wireless mouth guards will be better than specialized helmets at measuring head injuries.

From ACM News

Nissan's Cars Will Read Your Mind

The Japanese automaker is teaming up with Swiss researchers to build a car that will predict its driver's intentions.

Taking Touch Beyond the Touch Screen
From ACM News

Taking Touch Beyond the Touch Screen

A tablet computer developed collaboratively by researchers at Intel, Microsoft, and the University of Washington can be controlled not only by swiping and pinching...

From ACM News

Turn Your Smart Phone Into a Robot Remote Control

Android and iPhone users alike are newly empowered over robots, in two very different ways.
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