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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.


Project Exodus
From ACM Opinion

Project Exodus

On March 27th, an American astronaut named Scott Kelly blasted off from Earth and, six hours later, clambered onto the International Space Station.

New Research Suggests Hackers Can Track Subway Riders Through Their Phones
From ACM News

New Research Suggests Hackers Can Track Subway Riders Through Their Phones

Underground subways offer no place to hide from hackers.

Researchers Find the 'key' to Quantum Network Solution
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Find the 'key' to Quantum Network Solution

University of York researchers have developed a protocol to achieve key-rates over dozens of kilometers at three orders of magnitude higher than ever before. 

Behind the Downfall at Blackberry
From ACM Opinion

Behind the Downfall at Blackberry

Ever since Jim Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis stepped down as co-chairmen and co-chief executives of BlackBerry, neither has spoken much in public about the once-dominant...

STEM Gender Stereotypes Common Across the World
From ACM TechNews

STEM Gender Stereotypes Common Across the World

A study published by researchers at Northwestern University found people in the Netherlands were the most likely to associate science with men more than women. 

Mars Rover's Laser-Zapping Instrument Gets Sharper Vision
From ACM News

Mars Rover's Laser-Zapping Instrument Gets Sharper Vision

Tests on Mars have confirmed success of a repair to the autonomous focusing capability of the Chemistry and Camera (ChemCam) instrument on NASA's Curiosity Mars...

South African Scientists Create Cheap Computer
From ACM TechNews

South African Scientists Create Cheap Computer

University of Witwatersrand researchers are leading a project to create inexpensive computers or tablets to potentially be used by every student in South Africa...

Finally, Neural Networks That Actually Work
From ACM News

Finally, Neural Networks That Actually Work

Jeff Dean, who helped create the fundamental computing systems that underpin Google's vast online empire, has returned to the world of neural networks.

Boyhood
From ACM News

Boyhood

On the first weekend of January, many of the leading researchers in artificial intelligence traveled to Puerto Rico to take part in an unusual private conference...

New Approach Trains Robots to Match Human Dexterity and Speed
From ACM News

New Approach Trains Robots to Match Human Dexterity and Speed

In an engineering laboratory here, a robot has learned to screw the cap on a bottle, even figuring out the need to apply a subtle backward twist to find the thread...

Mit's Humanoid Robot Goes to Robot Boot Camp
From ACM Careers

Mit's Humanoid Robot Goes to Robot Boot Camp

As Russ Tedrake flings up the garage door to the dusty MIT lab, light whooshes in, revealing a 360-pound humanoid robot hanging from a rope.

With One False Tweet, Computer-Based Hack Crash Led to Real Panic
From ACM TechNews

With One False Tweet, Computer-Based Hack Crash Led to Real Panic

A false tweet sent from a hacked account caused the Dow Jones Industrial Average to fall and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index to lose more than $136 billion in seconds...

New Technology Could Fundamentally Change Future Wireless Communications
From ACM TechNews

New Technology Could Fundamentally Change Future Wireless Communications

A new technique that can estimate and cancel out interference from a transmission allows a radio device to simultaneously transmit and receive data on the same...

Microsoft’s Hololens Will Put Realistic 3D People in Your Living Room
From ACM News

Microsoft’s Hololens Will Put Realistic 3D People in Your Living Room

Demonstrations of augmented-reality displays typically involve tricking you into seeing animated content such as monsters and robots that aren’t really there.

How Stargazing Became a Numbers Game
From ACM News

How Stargazing Became a Numbers Game

People have long thought of astronomy as the science of looking to the stars, but discoveries in the cosmos increasingly come from a different kind of observational...

NASA's WISE Spacecraft Discovers Most Luminous Galaxy in ­niverse
From ACM News

NASA's WISE Spacecraft Discovers Most Luminous Galaxy in ­niverse

A remote galaxy shining with the light of more than 300 trillion suns has been discovered using data from NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE).

Quantum Life Spreads Entanglement Across Generations
From ACM News

Quantum Life Spreads Entanglement Across Generations

Computer scientists have long known that evolution is an algorithmic process that has little to do with the nature of the beasts it creates.

Your Brain's ­nique Response to Words Can Reveal Your Identity
From ACM News

Your Brain's ­nique Response to Words Can Reveal Your Identity

Watch your language. Words mean different things to different people—so the brainwaves they provoke could be a way to identify you.

Forging Relationships
From Communications of the ACM

Forging Relationships

Michael Stonebraker didn't realize at the outset that it would take six years to create INGRES, one of the world's first relational databases.

Klaus Tschira
From Communications of the ACM

Klaus Tschira: 1940-2015

Klaus Tschira, the entrepreneur, software pioneer, and patron and supporter of scientific research who died unexpectedly on March 31st, 2015,  made numerous lasting...
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