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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.


How Statisticians Found Air France Flight 447 Two Years After It Crashed Into Atlantic
From ACM News

How Statisticians Found Air France Flight 447 Two Years After It Crashed Into Atlantic

"In the early morning hours of June 1, 2009, Air France Flight AF 447, with 228 passengers and crew aboard, disappeared during stormy weather over the Atlantic...

Supercomputers ­sed to Model Disaster Scenarios
From ACM TechNews

Supercomputers ­sed to Model Disaster Scenarios

Bangor University School of Computer Science researchers are using supercomputers to run programs that can predict how people will react in a disaster. 

Google's 'quantum Computing Playground' Lets You Fiddle With Quantum Algorithms
From ACM TechNews

Google's 'quantum Computing Playground' Lets You Fiddle With Quantum Algorithms

Google has released a new Web-based integrated development environment that enables users to experiment with quantum algorithms. 

Google ­ses Artificial Brains to Teach Its Data Centers How to Behave
From ACM News

Google ­ses Artificial Brains to Teach Its Data Centers How to Behave

At Google, artificial intelligence isn't just a means of building cars that drive on their own, smartphone services that respond to the spoken word, and online...

Google's Next Phase in Driverless Cars: No Brakes or Steering Wheel
From ACM News

Google's Next Phase in Driverless Cars: No Brakes or Steering Wheel

Humans might be the one problem Google can't solve.

Skinny Wormholes Could Send Messages Through Time
From ACM News

Skinny Wormholes Could Send Messages Through Time

Like some bizarre form of optical fibre, a long, thin wormhole might let you send messages through time using pulses of light.

'smart Pills' with Chips, Cameras, and Robotic Parts Raise Legal, Ethical Questions
From ACM News

'smart Pills' with Chips, Cameras, and Robotic Parts Raise Legal, Ethical Questions

Each morning around 6, Mary Ellen Snodgrass swallows a computer chip.

Meet the People Behind the Wayback Machine, One of Our Favorite Things About the Internet
From ACM Opinion

Meet the People Behind the Wayback Machine, One of Our Favorite Things About the Internet

Brewster Kahle is quick to point out that we are not standing inside a former Scientology church.

Software Teaches Hybrids When (and When Not) to Go Electric
From ACM TechNews

Software Teaches Hybrids When (and When Not) to Go Electric

Chalmers University of Technology Ph.D. Viktor Larsson's doctoral dissertation describes software that would help hybrid vehicles optimize battery usage. 

Making Babies
From ACM News

Making Babies

Forty years ago, there was exactly one way for humans to reproduce.

Swarm and Fuzzy
From ACM News

Swarm and Fuzzy

When the first human colonists land on Mars several decades from now, their habitat will already be waiting.

Microbes Defy Rules of Dna Code
From ACM News

Microbes Defy Rules of Dna Code

The instructions encoded into DNA are thought to follow a universal set of rules across all domains of life. But researchers report today in Science1 that organisms...

B-52 Bomber Gets Its First New Communications System Since the 1960s
From ACM News

B-52 Bomber Gets Its First New Communications System Since the 1960s

The B-52 bomber, one of the great stalwarts of America's military arsenal, is getting its first major communications system upgrade since the Kennedy administration...

The Trouble With IBM
From ACM News

The Trouble With IBM

In the summer of 2012, five American technology companies bid on a project for a demanding new client: the CIA.

Employers Want Java Skills More Than Anything Else
From ACM TechNews

Employers Want Java Skills More Than Anything Else

Java/J2EE was the most in-demand software development skill for employers searching Dice.com in the first quarter of 2014, according to the company. 

How the ­.s. Could Escalate Its Name-and-Shame Campaign Against China's Espionage
From ACM Opinion

How the ­.s. Could Escalate Its Name-and-Shame Campaign Against China's Espionage

Earlier this week the U.S. Department of Justice indicted five Chinese military officers for industrial espionage, accusing them of leading attacks on the computers...

'killer Robots': Are They Really Inevitable?
From ACM News

'killer Robots': Are They Really Inevitable?

The robot tank is moving rapidly through the scrub on its caterpillar tracks.

Twenty Questions For Donald Knuth
From ACM News

Twenty Questions For Donald Knuth

To celebrate the publication of the eBooks of The Art of Computer Programming, (TAOCP), we asked several computer scientists, contemporaries, colleagues, and well...

Electric Grid, You Have Software ­pdates Available
From ACM News

Electric Grid, You Have Software ­pdates Available

The electric grid was designed as a one-way highway, with power cascading out from big power plants to cities and towns at the end of the line.

General Agreement
From Communications of the ACM

General Agreement

Leslie Lamport contributed to the theory and practice of building distributed computing systems that work as intended.
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