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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.


The German Sub Sank 76 Years Ago. Now Its Story Is Being Revealed in Eerie Fluorescent Detail.
From ACM News

The German Sub Sank 76 Years Ago. Now Its Story Is Being Revealed in Eerie Fluorescent Detail.

The U-boat seems to loom out of the blackness, careening to starboard, as if to avoid a collision.

RFID Tag Arrays Can Be ­sed to Track a Person's Movement
From ACM TechNews

RFID Tag Arrays Can Be ­sed to Track a Person's Movement

Radio-frequency identification tags may be used to track movement.

Advancement of AI Opens Health Data Privacy to Attack
From ACM TechNews

Advancement of AI Opens Health Data Privacy to Attack

Artificial intelligence innovations have created new threats to health data privacy against which current laws and regulations cannot adequately safeguard.

One Giant Step for a Chess-Playing Machine
From ACM News

One Giant Step for a Chess-Playing Machine

In early December, researchers at DeepMind, the artificial-intelligence company owned by Google's parent corporation, Alphabet Inc., filed a dispatch from the frontiers...

How AI Spotted Every Solar Panel in the ­.S.
From ACM TechNews

How AI Spotted Every Solar Panel in the ­.S.

Stanford University engineers have developed a method for locating every solar panel in the contiguous U.S.

These Incredibly Realistic Fake Faces Show How Algorithms Can Now Mess with ­s
From ACM News

These Incredibly Realistic Fake Faces Show How Algorithms Can Now Mess with ­s

These faces don't seem particularly remarkable. They could easily be taken from, say, Facebook or LinkedIn. In reality, they were dreamed up by a new kind of AI...

NASA's InSight Places First Instrument on Mars
From ACM News

NASA's InSight Places First Instrument on Mars

NASA's InSight lander has deployed its first instrument onto the surface of Mars, completing a major mission milestone. New images from the lander show the seismometer...

Computer Hardware for 3D Games Could Hold the Key to Replicating the Brain
From ACM TechNews

Computer Hardware for 3D Games Could Hold the Key to Replicating the Brain

Researchers have developed what they describe as the fastest, most energy-efficient simulation of part of a rat brain, using off-the-shelf computer hardware.

Then One Foggy Christmas Eve, Reindeers Got Connected
From ACM TechNews

Then One Foggy Christmas Eve, Reindeers Got Connected

Reindeer herders in Finland are fitting their animals with Internet-connected collars to keep track of their whereabouts in the wilderness, using a mobile app. ...

Meet 'Millie' the Avatar. She'd Like to Sell You a Pair of Sunglasses
From ACM TechNews

Meet 'Millie' the Avatar. She'd Like to Sell You a Pair of Sunglasses

A Canadian startup has created a life-size digital avatar to help retail brands looking for ways to boost falling in-store sales in the face of growing competition...

How Computers Got Shockingly Good at Recognizing Images
From ACM News

How Computers Got Shockingly Good at Recognizing Images

Right now, I can open up Google Photos, type "beach," and see my photos from various beaches I've visited over the last decade.

China's Tech Giants Want to Go Global. Just One Thing Might Stand in Their Way.
From ACM News

China's Tech Giants Want to Go Global. Just One Thing Might Stand in Their Way.

In the early 1980s, a cluster of fledging computer companies opened up shop in a chaotic corner of northwest Beijing, near the campuses of Peking and Tsinghua Universities...

Deep Learning Technique Reveals 'Invisible' Objects in the Dark
From ACM TechNews

Deep Learning Technique Reveals 'Invisible' Objects in the Dark

Engineers used a deep neural network to train a computer to reconstruct transparent objects from images captured in almost total darkness.

Consumer Rating Algorithms Score Big with Businesses, Governments
From ACM News

Consumer Rating Algorithms Score Big with Businesses, Governments

Businesses, universities, and governments increasingly are turning to algorithms to make crucial decisions about how to treat customers and citizens.

Getting the Dirt on Creation, Inside OSIRIS-REx's First Close Look at Bennu
From ACM News

Getting the Dirt on Creation, Inside OSIRIS-REx's First Close Look at Bennu

Last week at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the science team of NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission presented their first findings from the asteroid...

Brazil Could Save More Species at Half the Cost With New Forest Restoration Plan
From ACM TechNews

Brazil Could Save More Species at Half the Cost With New Forest Restoration Plan

An international research team developed customized software to determine the best strategy for Brazilian reforestation efforts.

Computers Determine States of Consciousness
From ACM TechNews

Computers Determine States of Consciousness

A new algorithm can distinguish between unresponsive wakefulness syndrome and a minimally conscious state through the use of  electroencephalographic brainwave...

Taiwan's Rice Farmers ­se Big Data to Cope With Climate Change
From ACM TechNews

Taiwan's Rice Farmers ­se Big Data to Cope With Climate Change

Taiwanese rice growers are using big data as a part of a pilot project to ensure the resilience of crop production in the face of climate change.

Team Invents Method to Shrink Objects to the Nanoscale
From ACM News

Team Invents Method to Shrink Objects to the Nanoscale

MIT researchers have invented a way to fabricate nanoscale 3-D objects of nearly any shape. They can also pattern the objects with a variety of useful materials...

How Russian Trolls ­sed Meme Warfare to Divide America
From ACM News

How Russian Trolls ­sed Meme Warfare to Divide America

There's a meme on Instagram, circulated by a group called "Born Liberal." A fist holds a cluster of strings, reaching down into people with television sets for...
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