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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.


China Wants to Replace Millions of Workers with Robots
From ACM News

China Wants to Replace Millions of Workers with Robots

China is laying the groundwork for a robot revolution by planning to automate the work currently done by millions of low-paid workers.

To Jupiter with Junocam!
From ACM News

To Jupiter with Junocam!

When NASA's Juno mission arrives at Jupiter on July 4, 2016, new views of the giant planet's swirling clouds will be sent back to Earth, courtesy of its color camera...

Virtual Reality Room Facilitates New Research
From ACM TechNews

Virtual Reality Room Facilitates New Research

Brown University's YURT Ultimate Reality Theater creates images viewable with three-dimensional (3D) glasses.

The High-Stakes Race to Rid the World of Human Drivers
From ACM News

The High-Stakes Race to Rid the World of Human Drivers

The race to bring driverless cars to the masses is only just beginning, but already it is a fight for the ages.

IBM to Develop Hardware to Wipe Out Errors in Quantum Computing
From ACM News

IBM to Develop Hardware to Wipe Out Errors in Quantum Computing

The race to build a full-blown quantum computer is heating up.

Software-Defined Batteries Take Charge
From ACM News

Software-Defined Batteries Take Charge

Researchers are exploring a new generation of batteries that rely on software to define performance.

Crispr Gene-Editing Gets Rules. Well, Guidelines, Really
From ACM News

Crispr Gene-Editing Gets Rules. Well, Guidelines, Really

If you're hoping to engineer perfect babies, you're going to have to wait.

Japan's Venus Orbiter Makes Comeback
From ACM News

Japan's Venus Orbiter Makes Comeback

Japan's Akatsuki spacecraft has entered orbit around Venus, five years after its first attempt failed.

Stanford Scientists Develop 'shazam For Earthquakes'
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Scientists Develop 'shazam For Earthquakes'

The new Fingerprint And Similarity Thresholding algorithm could transform how seismologists detect temblors not strong enough to register as earthquakes. 

Man With No Limbs Controls Robotic Hand ­sing Muscle Whispers
From ACM TechNews

Man With No Limbs Controls Robotic Hand ­sing Muscle Whispers

Sam Wilson, a Ph.D. student at Imperial College London, and supervisor Ravi Vaidyanathan are designing new ways for the human body to control prostheses. 

New Horizons Returns First, Best Images of Pluto
From ACM News

New Horizons Returns First, Best Images of Pluto

NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has sent back the first in a series of the sharpest views of Pluto it obtained during its July flyby—and the best close-ups of Pluto...

Untraceable Communication—guaranteed
From ACM News

Untraceable Communication—guaranteed

Anonymity networks, which sit on top of the public Internet, are designed to conceal people’s Web-browsing habits from prying eyes.

Can’t Put Down Your Device? That's By Design
From ACM News

Can’t Put Down Your Device? That's By Design

Greg Hochmuth was one of the first software engineers hired at Instagram.

Does Encryption Really Help Isis? Here's What You Need to Know
From ACM News

Does Encryption Really Help Isis? Here's What You Need to Know

There's the war on terrorism, and then there's the war on how to fight the war on terrorism.

Nasa Space Telescopes See Magnified Image of Faintest Galaxy from Early ­niverse
From ACM News

Nasa Space Telescopes See Magnified Image of Faintest Galaxy from Early ­niverse

Astronomers harnessing the combined power of NASA's Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes have found the faintest object ever seen in the early universe. It existed...

How Supercomputing Can Survive Beyond Moore's Law
From ACM TechNews

How Supercomputing Can Survive Beyond Moore's Law

Supercomputing needs to be extended beyond the limits of Moore's Law, says Sandia National Laboratories' Erik DeBenedictis.

What Makes Paris Look Like Paris? Let an Algorithm Tell You
From ACM News

What Makes Paris Look Like Paris? Let an Algorithm Tell You

Sure, you might be able to tell whether a city is a city by just looking at it. But can you train a machine to be even better than humans at recognizing them?

Gene-Editing Summit Supports Some Research in Human Embryos
From ACM News

Gene-Editing Summit Supports Some Research in Human Embryos

Gene-editing technology should not be used to modify human embryos that are intended for use in establishing a pregnancy, an international summit declared in a...

Patients Favor Changing the Genes of the Next Generation with Crispr
From ACM News

Patients Favor Changing the Genes of the Next Generation with Crispr

Jeff Carroll inherited the DNA mutation that causes Huntington's disease.

Zero to Expert in Eight Hours: These Robots Can Learn For Themselves
From ACM News

Zero to Expert in Eight Hours: These Robots Can Learn For Themselves

A yellow robotic arm pauses over a pile of metal cylinders, snaps a photo, then proceeds to confidently pick pieces out of the jumble.
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