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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.


Cyberwarfare, Conservation and Disease Prevention Could Benefit From MU Researcher's Network Model
From ACM TechNews

Cyberwarfare, Conservation and Disease Prevention Could Benefit From MU Researcher's Network Model

University of Missouri researchers have developed a computer model they say could have wide-reaching applications in cyberwarfare, conservation, and disease prevention...

Computer Scientists Reproduce the Evolution of Evolvability
From ACM TechNews

Computer Scientists Reproduce the Evolution of Evolvability

Modular systems evolve more easily than non-modular systems, but the evolution of modularity is a key open question for biology.  

Step Inside the Large Hadron Collider
From ACM News

Step Inside the Large Hadron Collider

The Compact Muon Solenoid is one of two main detectors at the LHC. It weighs 12,500 tons, measures 69 ft. (21 m) in length, and is a key research tool for 2,000...

Intel Fights to Keep Hp, Dell, and Other Customers from Defecting
From ACM News

Intel Fights to Keep Hp, Dell, and Other Customers from Defecting

Some of chip colossus Intel's biggest customers and partners are exploring a competing microprocessor design, signaling the start of a much-anticipated tech donnybrook...

Graphene Transistor Method Could Enable Fast Devices
From ACM TechNews

Graphene Transistor Method Could Enable Fast Devices

University of California, Los Angeles researchers have developed a scalable method for fabricating self-aligned graphene transistors that could lead to high-speed...

Solid-State Terahertz Devices Could Scan for Cancer
From ACM TechNews

Solid-State Terahertz Devices Could Scan for Cancer

Cornell University researchers have developed a method of generating terahertz signals on an inexpensive silicon chip. The method uses mainstream CMOS technology...

Future Planetary Rovers May Make Their Own Decisions
From ACM Opinion

Future Planetary Rovers May Make Their Own Decisions

It's a hot summer day, and your eyes spot an ice cream cart up ahead. Without even really thinking, you start walking that direction. Planetary scientists would...

A Northwest Pipeline to Silicon Valley
From ACM News

A Northwest Pipeline to Silicon Valley

Some budding entrepreneurs and computer whizzes based here in the Pacific Northwest are starting to turn heads down in Silicon Valley.

Northwestern Researchers Create 'rubber-Band Electronics'
From ACM TechNews

Northwestern Researchers Create 'rubber-Band Electronics'

Northwestern University researchers have developed a design that enables electronics to bend and stretch more than 200 percent of their original size using a combination...

Computer Watches Humans Play Connect Four, Then Beats Them
From ACM News

Computer Watches Humans Play Connect Four, Then Beats Them

A computer scientist has published a paper detailing how systems can successfully win at boardgames after watching two minute-long videos of humans playing.

How Software-Defined Radio Could Revolutionize Wireless
From ACM News

How Software-Defined Radio Could Revolutionize Wireless

In 1976, two shaggy-haired college dropouts founded a company called Apple to manufacture personal computers. The company's prospects looked so poor that the third...

Smart Headlights See through Rain and Snow
From ACM News

Smart Headlights See through Rain and Snow

A prototype headlight system can detect raindrops or snow streaks and "dis-illuminate" them, thereby increasing visibility on the road ahead.

Google Shaman Explains Mysteries of 'compute Engine'
From ACM News

Google Shaman Explains Mysteries of 'compute Engine'

Google started work on the Google Compute Engine over a year and a half ago, and it was all Peter Magnusson could do to keep his mouth shut.

Want a Terabyte Ipad? Then You'll Want to Read This
From ACM News

Want a Terabyte Ipad? Then You'll Want to Read This

In the latter half of the 19th century, the introduction of elevators and steel trusses enabled us to put up taller buildings with denser cores. It changed urban...

Melanin Considered for Bio-Friendly Electronics
From ACM TechNews

Melanin Considered for Bio-Friendly Electronics

University of Queensland researchers recently published a study that provides insight into the electrical properties of melanin and its biologically compatible...

Clothing the Body Electric
From ACM TechNews

Clothing the Body Electric

Electronics will be part of our wardrobe in the future, says University of South Carolina professor Xiaodong Li, who has turned the material in a cotton T-shirt...

Biology's Master Programmers
From ACM News

Biology's Master Programmers

George Church is an imposing figure—over six feet tall, with a large, rectangular face bordered by a brown and silver nest of beard and topped by a thick mop of...

How Google Is Teaching Computers to See
From ACM News

How Google Is Teaching Computers to See

Google is attempting to teach computers to recognize human faces without telling the computing algorithms which faces are human.

Blade Runner: Which Predictions Have Come True?
From ACM News

Blade Runner: Which Predictions Have Come True?

Based on Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K Dick, Ridley Scott's Blade Runner—the tale of a hunt for four dangerous "replicant" humans—is a classic...

How Many Computers to Identify a Cat? 16,000
From ACM News

How Many Computers to Identify a Cat? 16,000

Inside Google’s secretive X laboratory, known for inventing self-driving cars and augmented reality glasses, a small group of researchers began working several...
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