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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.


Facial Recognition May Boost Airport Security But Raises Privacy Worries
From ACM News

Facial Recognition May Boost Airport Security But Raises Privacy Worries

Passengers at Boston's Logan International Airport were surfing their phones and drinking coffee, waiting to board a flight to Aruba recently when a JetBlue agent...

Synthetic Iris Could Let Cameras React to Light Like Our Eyes Do
From ACM News

Synthetic Iris Could Let Cameras React to Light Like Our Eyes Do

An artificial iris can open and close in response to sunlight without any other outside control, just like the ones in your eyes.

Building a Brain May Mean Going Analog
From Communications of the ACM

Building a Brain May Mean Going Analog

Analog circuits consume less power per operation than CMOS technologies, and so should prove more efficient.

New Model of Evolution Finally Reveals How Cooperation Evolves
From ACM News

New Model of Evolution Finally Reveals How Cooperation Evolves

One of the great unanswered question in biology is why organisms have evolved to cooperate.

Solar System Survey Casts Doubt on Mysterious 'planet Nine'
From ACM News

Solar System Survey Casts Doubt on Mysterious 'planet Nine'

An analysis of four icy bodies discovered in the outer Solar System reveals no sign that they are being influenced by a large, unseen planet lurking beyond Neptune...

Yearning For New Physics at Cern, in a Post-Higgs Way
From ACM News

Yearning For New Physics at Cern, in a Post-Higgs Way

The world's biggest and most expensive time machine is running again.

Curiosity Doesn't Need Your Help Blasting Rocks with a Laser
From ACM News

Curiosity Doesn't Need Your Help Blasting Rocks with a Laser

As cars here on Earth begin to drive themselves and robots autonomously roam sidewalks delivering food and nearly running over dogs, over on Mars, the Curiosity...

How the Government Can Read Your Email
From ACM News

How the Government Can Read Your Email

With Congress focused on reforming the tax code and replacing Obamacare—plus keeping the government open—there's little oxygen for other policy issues.

Beyond the Five Senses
From ACM News

Beyond the Five Senses

The world we experience is not the real world. It's a mental construction, filtered through our physical senses. Which raises the question: How would our world...

Nasa Completes Study of Future 'ice Giant' Mission Concepts
From ACM News

Nasa Completes Study of Future 'ice Giant' Mission Concepts

A NASA-led and NASA-sponsored study of potential future missions to the mysterious "ice giant" planets Uranus and Neptune has been released—the first in a series...

The Fight to Save Thousands of Lives with Sea-Floor Sensors
From ACM News

The Fight to Save Thousands of Lives with Sea-Floor Sensors

Jerry Paros is worried about the geological time bomb ticking away just off the coast near his home in Washington state.

Government Researchers Hope to Teach New Robots Some of the Old Tricks of Etiquette
From ACM TechNews

Government Researchers Hope to Teach New Robots Some of the Old Tricks of Etiquette

Researchers are working to enable robots to learn human etiquette.

How an Entire Nation Became Russia's Test Lab For Cyberwar
From ACM News

How an Entire Nation Became Russia's Test Lab For Cyberwar

The clocks read zero when the lights went out.

From Drinking Straws to Robots
From ACM TechNews

From Drinking Straws to Robots

Researchers at Harvard University have created a type of semi-soft robot that can stand and walk, and a different robotic water strider that can push itself along...

'internet of Ships' Tells Tale of ­ss Fitzgerald Tragedy, Or Half of It
From ACM News

'internet of Ships' Tells Tale of ­ss Fitzgerald Tragedy, Or Half of It

On early Saturday morning off the coast of Japan, the Philippines-flagged cargo container carrierACX Crystal struck the USS Fitzgerald (DDG-62) on its starboard...

How to Build Software For a Computer 50 Times Faster Than Anything in the World
From ACM TechNews

How to Build Software For a Computer 50 Times Faster Than Anything in the World

Argonne National Laboratory scientists aim to produce exascale-enabled software by surmounting problems in memory, power, and computational resources.

Deepmind Now Learns from Human Preferences, Just Like a Toddler
From ACM News

Deepmind Now Learns from Human Preferences, Just Like a Toddler

AI systems continue to get increasingly powerful, but still need far too much hand-holding by their human masters. New research from DeepMind and OpenAI suggests...

World's Most Powerful Particle Collider Taps AI to Expose Hack Attacks
From ACM News

World's Most Powerful Particle Collider Taps AI to Expose Hack Attacks

Thousands of scientists worldwide tap into CERN's computer networks each day in their quest to better understand the fundamental structure of the universe.

Nasa Releases Kepler Survey Catalog with Hundreds of New Planet Candidates
From ACM News

Nasa Releases Kepler Survey Catalog with Hundreds of New Planet Candidates

NASA's Kepler space telescope team has released a mission catalog of planet candidates that introduces 219 new candidates, 10 of which are near-Earth size and orbiting...

New Prospects For ­niversal Memory
From ACM TechNews

New Prospects For ­niversal Memory

Researchers have found a way to control the oxygen concentration in tantalum oxide films produced by atomic layer deposition.
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