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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.


Spider Silk Sensors Could Search For Life on Mars
From ACM News

Spider Silk Sensors Could Search For Life on Mars

Ziggy Stardust would love this: Spiders could help find life on Mars.

Everything You Need to Know About the Vast ­ndersea Network that Makes the Internet Work
From ACM News

Everything You Need to Know About the Vast ­ndersea Network that Makes the Internet Work

Russians submarines and spy ships are "ggressively operating" near the undersea cables that are the backbone of the global Internet—worrying some U.S. intelligence...

Photons Open the Gateway For Quantum Networks
From ACM TechNews

Photons Open the Gateway For Quantum Networks

Researchers have created a photon contact, a key development in the effort to develop quantum computer networks. 

Dive of the Robobee
From ACM TechNews

Dive of the Robobee

The RoboBee is smaller than a paperclip, and can flap its tiny wings 120 times per second. 

Seven Key Facts About Cassini's Oct. 28 'plume Dive'
From ACM News

Seven Key Facts About Cassini's Oct. 28 'plume Dive'

NASA's Cassini spacecraft will sample the ocean of Saturn's moon Enceladus on Wednesday, Oct. 28, when it flies through the moon's plume of icy spray.

It's Not Just Vw: A Robust Market For Reprogramming Vehicles
From ACM News

It's Not Just Vw: A Robust Market For Reprogramming Vehicles

Lawmakers want to know more about Volkswagen's massive cheat—how the automaker used software to crank up the power on a vehicle, and then hide the fact.

­ab Research Studies Cyberattacks Through the Lens of Eeg and Eye Tracking
From ACM TechNews

­ab Research Studies Cyberattacks Through the Lens of Eeg and Eye Tracking

Researchers from the University of Alabama at Birmingham recently presented a study about users' susceptibility to, and ability to detect, certain cyberattacks. ...

How Emojis Find Their Way to Phones
From ACM TechNews

How Emojis Find Their Way to Phones

The Unicode Consortium, founded in the late 1980s to create a standardized code for text characters, is attracting interest as the arbiter of new emojis. 

Drivers Push Tesla's Autopilot Beyond Its Abilities
From ACM News

Drivers Push Tesla's Autopilot Beyond Its Abilities

Enthusiastic Tesla owners cheered last Wednesday when the company enabled the use of an automated driving system, called Autopilot, in its Model S all-electric...

We Don't Need Humans on Mars
From ACM Opinion

We Don't Need Humans on Mars

The two mobile robots Spirit and Opportunity were launched from Earth in 2003 and arrived on opposite sides of Mars in 2004. A suite of cameras, instruments, and...

­ltrathin Microlenses Could Boost Space Science and Tech
From ACM News

­ltrathin Microlenses Could Boost Space Science and Tech

Researchers have created the first ultrathin, flat lens able to focus light just as well as its curved counterparts, potentially enabling big breakthroughs in camera...

Researchers Aim to Make Privacy Second Nature For Software Developers
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Aim to Make Privacy Second Nature For Software Developers

A New York University researcher and colleagues are working to make user privacy an integral part of the software development process. 

Quality Boost For ­ser-Generated Sound
From ACM TechNews

Quality Boost For ­ser-Generated Sound

New algorithms could help people better understand sound quality on phones, video recorders, and dictaphones.

Introducing Marty, Stanford's Self-Driving, Electric, Drifting Delorean
From ACM TechNews

Introducing Marty, Stanford's Self-Driving, Electric, Drifting Delorean

A team of Stanford University engineers have built an autonomous, drifting DeLorean powered by electricity to research the physical limits of self-driving systems...

Algorithmic Authors
From Communications of the ACM

Algorithmic Authors

Natural Language Generation software begins delivering on the promise of automated prose.

Brain Science Helps Computers Separate Speakers in a Crowded Room
From Communications of the ACM

Brain Science Helps Computers Separate Speakers in a Crowded Room

People can listen to a single voice amid the hubbub of a cocktail party; algorithms can help computers do it, too.

Companies Proactively Seek Out Internal Threats
From Communications of the ACM

Companies Proactively Seek Out Internal Threats

Organizations must balance their concerns with the protection of employee privacy.

John H. Holland 1929-2015
From Communications of the ACM

John H. Holland 1929-2015

John Henry Holland, a pioneer in the study of complex adaptive systems and of what became known as genetic algorithms, died in August at the age of 86.

Nasa-Noaa's Suomi Npp Satellite Sees Record-Breaking Hurricane Patricia
From ACM News

Nasa-Noaa's Suomi Npp Satellite Sees Record-Breaking Hurricane Patricia

On October 23, a Hurricane Warning was in effect from San Blas to Punta San Telmo.

Nsa Advisory Sparks Concern of Secret Advance ­shering in Cryptoapocalypse
From ACM News

Nsa Advisory Sparks Concern of Secret Advance ­shering in Cryptoapocalypse

In August, National Security Agency officials advised US agencies and businesses to prepare for a not-too-distant time when the cryptography protecting virtually...
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