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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.


Mummy Dna ­nravels Ancient Egyptians' Ancestry
From ACM News

Mummy Dna ­nravels Ancient Egyptians' Ancestry

The tombs of ancient Egypt have yielded golden collars and ivory bracelets, but another treasure—human DNA—has proved elusive.

How a Gene Editing Tool Went From Labs to a Middle-School Classroom
From ACM News

How a Gene Editing Tool Went From Labs to a Middle-School Classroom

On a Saturday afternoon, 10 students gather at Genspace, a community lab in Brooklyn, to learn how to edit genes.

Got a Face-Recognition Algorithm? ­ncle Sam Wants to Review It
From ACM News

Got a Face-Recognition Algorithm? ­ncle Sam Wants to Review It

The nation's top-level intelligence office, the Director of National Intelligence, wants to find "the most accurate unconstrained face recognition algorithm."

Soft Robotic Structures Fold Themselves ­p in Hot Water
From ACM TechNews

Soft Robotic Structures Fold Themselves ­p in Hot Water

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have developed a new approach for making compliant, controllable robotic structures.

­cf Research Could Bring 'drastically' Higher Resolution to Your Phone and Tv
From ACM TechNews

­cf Research Could Bring 'drastically' Higher Resolution to Your Phone and Tv

Researchers at the University of Central Florida have developed a color-changing surface that is tunable via electric voltage.

­w Engineers Borrow From Electronics to Build Largest Circuits to Date in Living Eukaryotic Cells
From ACM TechNews

­w Engineers Borrow From Electronics to Build Largest Circuits to Date in Living Eukaryotic Cells

University of Washington researchers have demonstrated a new method for digital information processing in living cells.

The Soft Side of Quantum Computing
From ACM News

The Soft Side of Quantum Computing

Future quantum computers will need software tailored to their specific ways of operating.

A New Spin on Electronics
From ACM TechNews

A New Spin on Electronics

Researchers at the University of Utah found perovskites permit easily controllable electron spin and have a sufficiently long spin lifetime to transport information...

Software Simplified
From ACM News

Software Simplified

In 2015, geneticist Guy Reeves was trying to configure a free software system called Galaxy to get his bioinformatics projects off the ground.

Cassini Finds Saturn Moon May Have Tipped Over
From ACM News

Cassini Finds Saturn Moon May Have Tipped Over

Saturn's icy, ocean-bearing moon Enceladus may have tipped over in the distant past, according to recent research from NASA's Cassini mission.

How a Supreme Court Ruling on Printer Cartridges Changes What It Means to Buy Almost Anything
From ACM News

How a Supreme Court Ruling on Printer Cartridges Changes What It Means to Buy Almost Anything

Last week, the Supreme Court dealt a major blow to corporations that try to use patent law as a weapon against other firms, saying that companies can only be sued...

Shedding Light on How Humans Walk…with Robots
From ACM TechNews

Shedding Light on How Humans Walk…with Robots

Researchers have discovered that humans whose lower limbs are fastened to a typical clinical robot only modify their gait if the forces the robot applies threaten...

Faster, More Nimble Drones on the Horizon
From ACM TechNews

Faster, More Nimble Drones on the Horizon

Researchers have developed an algorithm to tune a Dynamic Vision Sensor camera to detect only specific changes in brightness that matter for a particular system...

A Network of Crystals For Long-Distance Quantum Communication
From ACM TechNews

A Network of Crystals For Long-Distance Quantum Communication

Researchers have demonstrated a protocol for long-distance quantum communication using a network of crystals.

High-Silica 'halos' Shed Light on Wet Ancient Mars
From ACM News

High-Silica 'halos' Shed Light on Wet Ancient Mars

Pale "halos" around fractures in bedrock analyzed by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover contain copious silica, indicating that ancient Mars had liquid water for a long...

Is China Outsmarting America in A.i.?
From ACM Careers

Is China Outsmarting America in A.i.?

Sören Schwertfeger finished his postdoctorate research on autonomous robots in Germany, and seemed set to go to Europe or the United States, where artificial intelligence...

New Scaling Law Predicts How Wheels Drive Over Sand
From ACM News

New Scaling Law Predicts How Wheels Drive Over Sand

When engineers design a new aircraft, they carry out much of the initial testing not on full-sized jets but on model planes that have been scaled down to fit inside...

Heads ­p: Augmented Reality Prepares For the Battlefield
From ACM News

Heads ­p: Augmented Reality Prepares For the Battlefield

At last week's Pentagon Lab Day in Washington, DC, the Army's Communications-Electronics Research, Development and Engineering Center (CERDEC) and Army Research...

Russian Hackers Are ­sing 'tainted' Leaks to Sow Disinformation
From ACM News

Russian Hackers Are ­sing 'tainted' Leaks to Sow Disinformation

Over the past year, the Kremlin's strategy of weaponizing leaks to meddle with democracies around the world has become increasingly clear, first in the US and more...

What Self-Driving Cars See
From ACM News

What Self-Driving Cars See

Giant tech companies are fighting over the technology in court. Start-ups around the world are racing to develop new versions of it. And engineers say it is essential...
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