acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

News


Latest News News Archive Refine your search:
subjectHardware
authorTechnology Review
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.


Designs With a Deeper Purpose
From ACM TechNews

Designs With a Deeper Purpose

Microsoft software design specialist Bill Buxton wants developers to focus on innovations that can improve humans' quality of life.

Reprogrammable Chips Could Enable Instant Gadget Upgrades
From ACM News

Reprogrammable Chips Could Enable Instant Gadget Upgrades

Obsolescence is the curse of electronics: no sooner have you bought a gadget than its hardware is outdated. A new, low cost type of microchip that can rearrange...

From ACM TechNews

Speedier Nanotube Circuits

Stanford University researchers recently expanded on an earlier study involving the development of faster nanotube circuits, which could lead to their use in complex...

Dialing with Your Thoughts
From ACM News

Dialing with Your Thoughts

Researchers in California have created a way to place a call on a cell phone using just your thoughts. Their new brain-computer interface is almost 100 percent...

Companies Hope to 'program' the Internet
From ACM News

Companies Hope to 'program' the Internet

Most data networks could be faster, more energy efficient, and more secure. But network hardware—switches, routers, and other devices—is essentially locked down...

The First Plastic Computer Processor
From ACM TechNews

The First Plastic Computer Processor

European researchers have developed a computer processor and memory chip made from plastic semiconductors.  "Compared to using silicon, this has the advantage of...

The First Plastic Computer Processor
From ACM News

The First Plastic Computer Processor

Silicon may underpin the computers that surround us, but the rigid inflexibility of the semiconductor means it cannot reach everywhere. The first computer processor...

How Cruise Missiles Would Beat Gps Jammers in Libya
From ACM News

How Cruise Missiles Would Beat Gps Jammers in Libya

Now that jammers are cheap and potentially ubiquitous, how do Tomahawk missiles stay on course?

Physicists Build Single-Atom Memory For Quantum Information
From ACM News

Physicists Build Single-Atom Memory For Quantum Information

A single atom of rubidium sits at the heart of an exotic new quantum memory device.

China's Homemade Supercomputer May Be the Most Efficient Ever
From ACM TechNews

China's Homemade Supercomputer May Be the Most Efficient Ever

China plans to launch a new homegrown supercomputer, the Dawning 6000, this summer, and it "could rival even Blue Gene/Q systems for performance per watt supremacy...

Light-Emitting Rubber Could Sense Structural Damage
From ACM News

Light-Emitting Rubber Could Sense Structural Damage

Researchers at Princeton University have built a new type of sensor that could help engineers quickly assess the health of a building or bridge. The sensor is...

From ACM TechNews

Giving Hackers a Printed Invitation

At the Shmoocon conference, researchers demonstrated how hackers are using printers to infiltrate corporate computer networks. Printers are "totally integrated...

Dazzling Dual-Core Phones and Tablets
From ACM News

Dazzling Dual-Core Phones and Tablets

New processors are a big improvement, but it will take time for apps to take advantage.

What to Expect at CES 2012
From ACM News

What to Expect at CES 2012

A preview of consumer electronics in the years to come.

A Lego Reconstruction of the World's Earliest Computer
From ACM News

A Lego Reconstruction of the World's Earliest Computer

Before the birth of Christ the Greeks built a mechanical computer. Now an Apple engineer has made a functional Lego replica.

Let Your Coaster Do the Talking
From ACM News

Let Your Coaster Do the Talking

An interactive surface encourages conversation by letting coasters communicate.

Parc Readies Printed Electronics For Market
From ACM News

Parc Readies Printed Electronics For Market

Early 2011 will see printed memory devices in toys and printed sensors in packages used to ship drugs.

From ACM News

Your Next Wallet Is Calling

"Contactless" hardware lets phones and gadgets pay with a tap, but the coming plethora of apps that use it may confuse users.

Silicon's Long Good-Bye
From ACM News

Silicon's Long Good-Bye

Researchers make transistors out of a material that's better than silicon.

Cell-Phone Chips to the Rescue
From ACM News

Cell-Phone Chips to the Rescue

Data centers, under greater demand than ever, are looking to low-power chips as a way to save money, but switching won't be easy.
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account