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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.


Long After His Accident, Sam Schmidt Takes the Wheel Again Thanks to Project Sam
From ACM News

Long After His Accident, Sam Schmidt Takes the Wheel Again Thanks to Project Sam

In the late 90s, Sam Schmidt had a promising career as an IndyCar driver, finishing fifth in the championship in 1999 after taking his first win in Las Vegas.

Atomic Memory Could Store ­S Library of Congress in a Dust Speck
From ACM News

Atomic Memory Could Store ­S Library of Congress in a Dust Speck

It's a memory so small you'll forget where you left it. A new data storage system uses single atoms as computer bits, and could hold the contents of the US Library...

Ready, Set, Think! Mind-Controlled Drones Race to the Future
From ACM TechNews

Ready, Set, Think! Mind-Controlled Drones Race to the Future

The University of Florida last week hosted what it called the world's first drone race involving brain-computer interfaces. 

­.s. Drops New York Fight with Apple After Gaining Access to Iphone
From ACM News

­.s. Drops New York Fight with Apple After Gaining Access to Iphone

The U.S. Justice Department on Friday dropped its effort to force Apple Inc to help unlock an iPhone in a drug case in New York after someone provided authorities...

Computers That Crush Humans at Games Might Have Met Their Match: 'starcraft'
From ACM News

Computers That Crush Humans at Games Might Have Met Their Match: 'starcraft'

Humanity has fallen to artificial intelligence in checkers, chess, and, last month, Go, the complex ancient Chinese board game.

Europe Plans Giant Billion-Euro Quantum Technologies Project
From ACM News

Europe Plans Giant Billion-Euro Quantum Technologies Project

The European Commission has quietly announced plans to launch a €1-billion (US$1.13 billion) project to boost a raft of quantum technologies—from secure communication...

The Buzz of Your Skull Can Be ­sed to Tell Exactly Who You Are
From ACM News

The Buzz of Your Skull Can Be ­sed to Tell Exactly Who You Are

You will know me by the buzz in my head. Biometric systems, which identify people by their physiological features, can use everything from ear shape to walking...

New Maps Make Aftershocks Look Scarier Than the Main Quake
From ACM News

New Maps Make Aftershocks Look Scarier Than the Main Quake

Aftershocks continue shaking the cities of Kumamoto, Japan and Muisne, Ecuador, almost a week after earthquakes rocked the two cities, frightening residents still...

Eth Researchers Print Wild Robotic Beings
From ACM TechNews

Eth Researchers Print Wild Robotic Beings

Researchers from ETH Zurich, Disney Research Zurich, and Carnegie Mellon University are developing a software tool that lets users custom-design a robot on a computer...

Russia, ­.s. Get Closer to ­niversal Memory
From ACM TechNews

Russia, ­.s. Get Closer to ­niversal Memory

A joint effort by researchers from Russia, Nebraska, and Switzerland seeks a "universal" non-volatile memory composed of an ultra-thin ferroelectric film grown...

Root Is a Little Robot on a Mission to Teach Kids to Code
From ACM TechNews

Root Is a Little Robot on a Mission to Teach Kids to Code

Researchers from Harvard University's Wyss Institute say their robot is ready to teach both kids and adults how to code. 

Gene-Editing Hack Yields Pinpoint Precision
From ACM News

Gene-Editing Hack Yields Pinpoint Precision

A painstaking re-engineering of the CRISPR gene-editing system has given researchers the ability to alter individual DNA letters efficiently in a given gene.

Rules For Cyberwarfare Still ­nclear, Even as ­.s. Engages In It
From ACM News

Rules For Cyberwarfare Still ­nclear, Even as ­.s. Engages In It

When Defense Secretary Ashton Carter landed in Iraq for a surprise visit this week, he came armed with this news: More than 200 additional U.S. troops are headed...

Hyper Vision
From ACM News

Hyper Vision

There is something special happening in a generic office park in an uninspiring suburb near Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Self-Driving Cars, Meet Rubber Duckies
From ACM TechNews

Self-Driving Cars, Meet Rubber Duckies

A course in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory aimed to create a fleet of duckie-adorned self-driving...

Droning On
From ACM TechNews

Droning On

University of Delaware professor Guoquan Huang has received a two-year grant to design resource-aware, attack-resilient, consistent micro aerial vehicle navigation...

New Electronic Display Is 10 Times Thinner Than Human Skin
From ACM TechNews

New Electronic Display Is 10 Times Thinner Than Human Skin

University of Tokyo researchers have developed a thin-film electronic display that can be laminated onto a person's body without the wearer knowing it is there. ...

Robotic Consensus
From ACM News

Robotic Consensus

Planning algorithms for teams of robots fall into two categories: centralized algorithms, in which a single computer makes decisions for the whole team, and decentralized...

Zoo of Theories Showcased in Publications on Lhc Anomaly
From ACM News

Zoo of Theories Showcased in Publications on Lhc Anomaly

Hints of a new subatomic particle at the world’s most powerful atom smasher have inspired theoretical physicists to write more than 300 papers in the past four...

Who's the Michael Jordan of Computer Science? New Tool Ranks Researchers' Influence
From ACM News

Who's the Michael Jordan of Computer Science? New Tool Ranks Researchers' Influence

Last fall, the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence in Seattle, Washington, launched a challenge to Google Scholar, PubMed, and other online search engines...
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