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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.


Bridging the Bio-Electronic Divide
From ACM News

Bridging the Bio-Electronic Divide

A new DARPA program aims to develop an implantable neural interface able to provide unprecedented signal resolution and data-transfer bandwidth between the human...

Evidence Grows For Giant Planet on Fringes of Solar System
From ACM News

Evidence Grows For Giant Planet on Fringes of Solar System

A century after observatory founder Percival Lowell speculated that a 'Planet X' lurks at the fringes of the Solar System, astronomers say that they have the best...

Nasa's Van Allen Probes Revolutionize View of Radiation Belts
From ACM News

Nasa's Van Allen Probes Revolutionize View of Radiation Belts

About 600 miles from Earth's surface is the first of two donut-shaped electron swarms, known as the Van Allen Belts, or the radiation belts.

Scientists Demonstrate Basics of Nucleic Acid Computing Inside Cells
From ACM TechNews

Scientists Demonstrate Basics of Nucleic Acid Computing Inside Cells

Scientists have demonstrated basic computing operations inside a living mammalian cel.

For Now, Self-Driving Cars Still Need Humans
From ACM News

For Now, Self-Driving Cars Still Need Humans

Car enthusiasts, after hearing industry executives discussing the self-driving technology being built into their vehicles, might be forgiven for thinking robotic...

Star's Bizarre Optical Antics Go Back at Least a Century
From ACM News

Star's Bizarre Optical Antics Go Back at Least a Century

For over a century, a star's bizarre behavior has been hiding in plain sight.

'hack the Dinos' Helps Paleontologists
From ACM Careers

'hack the Dinos' Helps Paleontologists

Kaleigh Clary, a computer science graduate student at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, drove down to offer a day of free work for the American Museum of...

Most Luminous Galaxy Is Ripping Itself Apart
From ACM News

Most Luminous Galaxy Is Ripping Itself Apart

In a far-off galaxy, 12.4 billion light-years from Earth, a ravenous black hole is devouring galactic grub. Its feeding frenzy produces so much energy, it stirs...

How Future Cars Will Predict Your Driving Maneuvers Before You Make Them
From ACM News

How Future Cars Will Predict Your Driving Maneuvers Before You Make Them

Buy a new car these days and the chances are that it will be fitted with an array of driver-assistance technologies.

Scientists Capture Crispr's Gene-Cutting in Action
From ACM News

Scientists Capture Crispr's Gene-Cutting in Action

For all the furious hype around the gene-editing tool Crispr/Cas9, no one has ever really seen it in action. Like really seen it.

Wikipedia Turns 15
From ACM Opinion

Wikipedia Turns 15

It must be difficult for the roughly half a billion people who visit Wikipedia every month to remember a world without the free online encyclopedia.

Microsoft Neural Net Shows Deep Learning Can Get Way Deeper
From ACM TechNews

Microsoft Neural Net Shows Deep Learning Can Get Way Deeper

A Microsoft researcher team won the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge in December with a new approach to deep learning. 

China's Quantum Space Pioneer: We Need to Explore the ­nknown
From ACM Opinion

China's Quantum Space Pioneer: We Need to Explore the ­nknown

Physicist Pan Jian-Wei is the architect of the world's first attempt to set up a quantum communications link between Earth and space—an experiment that is set to...

The Nfl Is Finally Tapping Into the Power of Data
From ACM News

The Nfl Is Finally Tapping Into the Power of Data

The NFL may be the most popular and profitable major sport in America, but until recently, it's lagged behind other leagues in sophisticated use of data analysis...

Gene Editing Shows Promise in Treating Muscular Dystrophy
From ACM News

Gene Editing Shows Promise in Treating Muscular Dystrophy

Duchenne muscular dystrophy is one of the most common fatal genetic diseases. It causes muscle degeneration and eventually death due to weakened heart and lung...

Oscar-Winning Animator and Filmmaker Chris Landreth at ­ of T Computer Science
From ACM TechNews

Oscar-Winning Animator and Filmmaker Chris Landreth at ­ of T Computer Science

Award-winning animator and filmmaker Chris Landreth serves as distinguished research artist-in-residence at the University of Toronto's computer science department...

The Convenience-Surveillance Tradeoff
From ACM News

The Convenience-Surveillance Tradeoff

People love free stuff. That's the principle that helps explain the complicated series of privacy-related calculations that modern life increasingly requires.

Linux Foundation Moves Dronecode Project Forward
From ACM TechNews

Linux Foundation Moves Dronecode Project Forward

The open source Dronecode effort, a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project launched in October 2014, has grown from only a handful of members to 51. 

The Bbva Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award Goes to Stephen Cook
From ACM News

The Bbva Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award Goes to Stephen Cook

Cook expanded on Turing's concept of computability ... to include efficiency, so we can ascertain which problems are worth trying to solve and which not.

Bitter Fight Over Crispr Patent Heats Up
From ACM News

Bitter Fight Over Crispr Patent Heats Up

A versatile technique for editing genomes has been called the biggest biotechnology advancesince the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and the US Patent and Trademark...
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