acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

News


bg-corner

An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


Models of Pedestrian Flow Stumble Because People Change Their Minds
From ACM News

Models of Pedestrian Flow Stumble Because People Change Their Minds

The flow of pedestrians is a critical part of the design of buildings, stadiums, and much more.

Bluetooth and Wi-Fi Sensing From Mobile Devices May Help Improve Bus Service
From ACM TechNews

Bluetooth and Wi-Fi Sensing From Mobile Devices May Help Improve Bus Service

University of Washington researchers say they have developed a low-cost way to harness useful data from bus passengers' mobile device Wi-Fi and Bluetooth signals...

$28m Challenge to Figure Out Why Brains Are So Good at Learning
From ACM TechNews

$28m Challenge to Figure Out Why Brains Are So Good at Learning

The U.S. Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity has invested more than $28 million in grants toward the development of advanced machine-learning algorithms...

Europe's Top Digital-Privacy Watchdog Zeros In on ­.s. Tech Giants
From ACM News

Europe's Top Digital-Privacy Watchdog Zeros In on ­.s. Tech Giants

The latest standoff between Europe and American tech companies runs through a quiet street just north of the Louvre Museum, past chic cafes and part of the French...

ACM Inducts Fellows
From Communications of the ACM

ACM Inducts Fellows

ACM has recognized 42 of its members for significant contributions to the development and application of computing, in areas ranging from data management and spoken...

How a Supervillain (or a Hacker in His Basement) Could Destroy the Internet
From Communications of the ACM

How a Supervillain (or a Hacker in His Basement) Could Destroy the Internet

Network experts share their greatest fears about attacks and accidents that could destroy the Internet.

In Privacy Law, It's the U.S. vs. the World
From Communications of the ACM

In Privacy Law, It's the U.S. vs. the World

Snowden revelations force changes, but Facebook (and others) resist.

NASA Mars Rover Curiosity Tastes Scooped, Sieved Sand
From ACM News

NASA Mars Rover Curiosity Tastes Scooped, Sieved Sand

At its current location for inspecting an active sand dune, NASA's Curiosity Mars rover is adding some sample-processing moves not previously used on Mars.

Why Doesn't Silicon Valley Hire Black Coders?
From ACM Careers

Why Doesn't Silicon Valley Hire Black Coders?

In the fall of 2013 a young software engineer named Charles Pratt arrived on Howard University's campus in Washington.

Larry Page, Google Founder, Is Still Innovator in Chief
From ACM Careers

Larry Page, Google Founder, Is Still Innovator in Chief

Three years ago, Charles Chase, an engineer who manages Lockheed Martin's nuclear fusion program, was sitting on a white leather couch at Google's Solve for X conference...

British Voice Encryption Protocol Has Massive Weakness, Researcher Says
From ACM TechNews

British Voice Encryption Protocol Has Massive Weakness, Researcher Says

A researcher charges the protocol created by a U.K. governmental group to encrypt voice calls has a weakness built into it by design that could enable mass surveillance...

How an AI Algorithm Learned to Write Political Speeches
From ACM TechNews

How an AI Algorithm Learned to Write Political Speeches

Researchers have developed an artificial intelligence machine that learned how to write political speeches that are very similar to real speeches. 

Japan Road Tests Self-Driving Cars to Keep Aging Motorists Mobile
From ACM TechNews

Japan Road Tests Self-Driving Cars to Keep Aging Motorists Mobile

Japan's automakers aim to meet the challenge of aging drivers with few transportation options by testing self-driving vehicles on roads. 

­.s. Military Wants to Create Cyborg Soldiers
From ACM TechNews

­.s. Military Wants to Create Cyborg Soldiers

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is working to create a chip to implant in a soldier's brain to connect it directly to computers. 

This Smartphone Technology 3d Maps Your Meal and Counts Its Calories
From ACM TechNews

This Smartphone Technology 3d Maps Your Meal and Counts Its Calories

NutriRay3D is a new laser-mapping technology/smartphone app that lets users point a smartphone at food and get an accurate count of its total calories and nutrition...

Crispr Goes Commercial
From ACM News

Crispr Goes Commercial

Within just three years since the discovery of its gene-editing potential, the new technique Crispr has become the hottest, and most controversial, development...

Here Come the Robots: Davos Bosses Brace For Big Technology Shocks
From ACM News

Here Come the Robots: Davos Bosses Brace For Big Technology Shocks

Implantable mobile phones. 3D-printed organs for transplant. Clothes and reading-glasses connected to the Internet.

Football Coaches Are Turning to AI For Help Calling Plays
From ACM News

Football Coaches Are Turning to AI For Help Calling Plays

In 1996, IBM'S Deep Blue became the first supercomputer to defeat a chess grandmaster, Garry Kasparov, in a game.

Can Augmented Reality Make Remote Communication Feel More Intimate?
From ACM News

Can Augmented Reality Make Remote Communication Feel More Intimate?

Nothing beats talking to another person face-to-face, but a group of researchers are considering whether a life-size projection of a person that appears to be sitting...

Message on a Bottle: A Personalized Information Technology
From ACM News

Message on a Bottle: A Personalized Information Technology

A spirits company equips its bottles with customizable LED message bands.
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account