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subjectComputer Systems
authorWired
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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.


Trucks Move Past Cars on the Road to Autonomy
From ACM News

Trucks Move Past Cars on the Road to Autonomy

Money is pouring into autonomous trucking startups, just as many are souring on the short-term prospects for self-driving cars.

Algorithm That Predicts Deadly Infections Is Often Flawed
From ACM TechNews

Algorithm That Predicts Deadly Infections Is Often Flawed

An algorithm designed to forecast sepsis infections is significantly lacking in accuracy.

Apple’s M1 Chip Has a Fascinating Flaw
From ACM News

Apple’s M1 Chip Has a Fascinating Flaw

The covert channel bug is harmless, but it demonstrates that even new CPUs have mistakes in them.

As Chips Shrink, Rowhammer Attacks Get Harder to Stop
From ACM News

As Chips Shrink, Rowhammer Attacks Get Harder to Stop

A full fix for the "Half-Double" technique will require rethinking how memory semiconductors are designed.

Ford's Ever-Smarter Robots Are Speeding Up the Assembly Line
From ACM News

Ford's Ever-Smarter Robots Are Speeding Up the Assembly Line

A transmission factory shows how artificial intelligence may creep into industrial processes in gradual and often imperceptible ways.

This AI Could Help Wipe Out Colon Cancer
From ACM News

This AI Could Help Wipe Out Colon Cancer

Medtronic's GI Genius, recently cleared by the FDA, will help doctors identify precancerous polyps.

Intel Wants to Revive U.S. Chipmaking—but It Has to Catch Up First
From ACM News

Intel Wants to Revive U.S. Chipmaking—but It Has to Catch Up First

The semiconductor giant announced plans to open its factories to others, but it will send some of its most advanced designs to be made in Taiwan.

Microsoft's Big Win in Quantum Computing Was an 'Error' After All
From ACM News

Microsoft's Big Win in Quantum Computing Was an 'Error' After All

In a 2018 paper, researchers said they found evidence of an elusive theorized particle. A closer look now suggests otherwise.

Split-Second 'Phantom' Images Can Fool Tesla's Autopilot
From ACM News

Split-Second 'Phantom' Images Can Fool Tesla's Autopilot

Researchers found they could stop a Tesla by flashing a few frames of a stop sign for less than half a second on an Internet-connected billboard.

Spies Can Eavesdrop by Watching a Light Bulb's Vibrations
From ACM TechNews

Spies Can Eavesdrop by Watching a Light Bulb's Vibrations

Researchers  have developed a long-distance eavesdropping method that exploits vibrations on the glass surface of a light bulb's interior.

This Robot Can Guess How You're Feeling by the Way You Walk
From ACM TechNews

This Robot Can Guess How You're Feeling by the Way You Walk

A new algorithm enables a small four-wheeled robot to perform real-time gait analysis in order to determine a walker's emotional state.

Inside Big Tech’s High-stakes Race for Quantum Supremacy
From ACM News

Inside Big Tech’s High-stakes Race for Quantum Supremacy

Quantum computers used to be an impossible dream. Now, after a decade of research by some of the world's biggest tech companies, they're on the verge of changing...

After 50 Years of Effort, Researchers Made Silicon Emit Light
From ACM TechNews

After 50 Years of Effort, Researchers Made Silicon Emit Light

Researchers at the Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands say they have induced the emission of light from silicon.

Intel Patching the Patch for the Patch for 'Zombieload' Flaw
From ACM TechNews

Intel Patching the Patch for the Patch for 'Zombieload' Flaw

Intel said it will release yet another patch for a microarchitectural data sampling vulnerability that allows hackers to fool microprocessors into exposing protected...

50 Years Later, We Still Don't Grasp the Mother of All Demos
From ACM News

50 Years Later, We Still Don't Grasp the Mother of All Demos

Doug Engelbart didn't just want to show off new technology. He wanted to demonstrate a system for improving humanity.

Scientists Spot Undersea Fault Using Fiber-Optic Cables
From ACM TechNews

Scientists Spot Undersea Fault Using Fiber-Optic Cables

Scientists discovered a new underwater fault five miles off Monterey Bay, CA, through the use of infrared laser pulses fired along an idle fiber-optic cable.

Bitcoin Will Burn the Planet Down. The Question: How Fast?
From ACM News

Bitcoin Will Burn the Planet Down. The Question: How Fast?

A new paper concludes that it takes more than four times as much energy to mine $1 of bitcoin as mining $1 of copper.

Facebook ­nleashes Software to Make Programming Robots Easy
From ACM TechNews

Facebook ­nleashes Software to Make Programming Robots Easy

Facebook has open-sourced a new software framework to simplify robotic programming.

Your Cadillac Can Now Drive Itself More Places
From ACM News

Your Cadillac Can Now Drive Itself More Places

The automaker has expanded the range of Super Cruise to include trickier divided highways in the U.S. and Canada.

These Hidden Women Helped Invent Chaos Theory
From ACM News

These Hidden Women Helped Invent Chaos Theory

New material provides a fuller, fairer account of the birth of chaos.
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