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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.


A Data-Cleaning Tool For Building Better Prediction Models
From ACM TechNews

A Data-Cleaning Tool For Building Better Prediction Models

Researchers at Columbia University and the University of California, Berkeley have developed software to replace humans in the most error-prone steps of cleaning...

Nasa Aims at an Asteroid Holding Clues to the Solar System's Roots
From ACM News

Nasa Aims at an Asteroid Holding Clues to the Solar System's Roots

For the next two years, NASA's latest robotic spacecraft will be chasing down an asteroid near Earth in the hopes of scooping up some of the most primordial bits...

Mars Contamination Fear Could Divert Curiosity Rover
From ACM News

Mars Contamination Fear Could Divert Curiosity Rover

Four years into its travels across Mars, NASA's Curiosity rover faces an un­expected challenge: wending its way safely among dozens of dark streaks that could indicate...

Carbon Nanotube Transistors Finally Outperform Silicon
From ACM News

Carbon Nanotube Transistors Finally Outperform Silicon

Back in the 1990s, observers predicted that the single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT) would be the nanomaterial that pushed silicon aside and created a post-CMOS...

How Apple Helped Create Ireland's Economies, Real and Fantastical
From ACM Careers

How Apple Helped Create Ireland's Economies, Real and Fantastical

There are two equally valid, yet seemingly incompatible, ways of viewing Apple Computer's relationship with Ireland.

Does the Messaging Service Telegram Take Privacy Too Far?
From ACM News

Does the Messaging Service Telegram Take Privacy Too Far?

The encryption of digital information is considered the best protection against hackers, snoops or potential enemies looking to poke around into private exchanges...

No Sailors Needed: Robot Sailboats Scour the Oceans for Data
From ACM News

No Sailors Needed: Robot Sailboats Scour the Oceans for Data

Two robotic sailboats trace lawn-mower-style paths across the violent surface of the Bering Sea, off the coast of Alaska.

Jupiter's North Pole Unlike Anything Encountered in Solar System
From ACM News

Jupiter's North Pole Unlike Anything Encountered in Solar System

NASA's Juno spacecraft has sent back the first-ever images of Jupiter's north pole, taken during the spacecraft's first flyby of the planet with its instruments...

Philae Found!
From ACM News

Philae Found!

Less than a month before the end of the mission, Rosetta's high-resolution camera has revealed the Philae lander wedged into a dark crack on Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko...

How Spy Tech Firms Let Governments See Everything on a Smartphone
From ACM News

How Spy Tech Firms Let Governments See Everything on a Smartphone

Want to invisibly spy on 10 iPhone owners without their knowledge? Gather their every keystroke, sound, message and location?

What Starlight Teaches ­S About Space (pretty Much Everything)
From ACM News

What Starlight Teaches ­S About Space (pretty Much Everything)

In the southern sky, there is a constellation called Centaurus, its arms outstretched and its flanks straddling the famous Southern Cross.

Ceres' Geological Activity, Ice Revealed in New Research
From ACM News

Ceres' Geological Activity, Ice Revealed in New Research

A lonely 3-mile-high (5-kilometer-high) mountain on Ceres is likely volcanic in origin, and the dwarf planet may have a weak, temporary atmosphere.

Building a New Tor that Can Resist Next-Generation State Surveillance
From ACM News

Building a New Tor that Can Resist Next-Generation State Surveillance

Since Edward Snowden stepped into the limelight from a hotel room in Hong Kong three years ago, use of the Tor anonymity network has grown massively.

Digitizing Photography's 'genome'
From ACM News

Digitizing Photography's 'genome'

Bringing computer science to art history.

A Call From Outer Space, or a Cosmic Wrong Number?
From ACM News

A Call From Outer Space, or a Cosmic Wrong Number?

It's probably just a piece of cosmic spam, the astrophysical equivalent of butt dialing. But nobody really knows for sure.

So Much for Counter-Phishing Training: Half of People Click Anything Sent to Them
From ACM News

So Much for Counter-Phishing Training: Half of People Click Anything Sent to Them

Security experts often talk about the importance of educating people about the risks of "phishing" e-mails containing links to malicious websites. But sometimes...

Revealed: Google's Plan For Quantum Computer Supremacy
From ACM Careers

Revealed: Google's Plan For Quantum Computer Supremacy

Somewhere in California, Google is building a device that will usher in a new era for computing.

Forget Software: Now Hackers Are Exploiting Physics
From ACM News

Forget Software: Now Hackers Are Exploiting Physics

Practically every word we use to describe a computer is a metaphor.

The Surprising Story of the First Microprocessors
From ACM News

The Surprising Story of the First Microprocessors

Transistors, the electronic amplifiers and switches found at the heart of everything from pocket radios to warehouse-size supercomputers, were invented in 1947.

Here's How Russian Hackers Could Actually Tip an American Election
From ACM Opinion

Here's How Russian Hackers Could Actually Tip an American Election

Reports this week of Russian intrusions into U.S. election systems have startled many voters, but computer experts are not surprised.
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