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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.


Forecasting Future May One Day Become as Practical as Predicting Weather, Thanks to Big Data Advances
From ACM TechNews

Forecasting Future May One Day Become as Practical as Predicting Weather, Thanks to Big Data Advances

The Early Model Based Even Recognition using Surrogates (EMBERS) project was created to develop ways to use big data to forecast significant societal events. 

Ask the Crowd: Robots Learn Faster, Better With Online Helpers
From ACM TechNews

Ask the Crowd: Robots Learn Faster, Better With Online Helpers

University of Washington computer scientists have discovered crowdsourcing is an effective way to teach robots.

Quantum State May Be a Real Thing
From ACM News

Quantum State May Be a Real Thing

At the very heart of quantum mechanics lies a monster waiting to consume unwary minds.

How a Little Open Source Project Came to Dominate Big Data
From ACM News

How a Little Open Source Project Came to Dominate Big Data

It began as a nagging technical problem that needed solving.

The AP's Newest Business Reporter Is an Algorithm
From ACM News

The AP's Newest Business Reporter Is an Algorithm

Journalistic earnings stories can feel robotic, even when written by a news organization as prestigious as the Associated Press.

Automotive Grade Linux Hits the Road
From ACM TechNews

Automotive Grade Linux Hits the Road

Car vendors have an open source platform for building embedded applications and features in Automotive Grade Linux.

The $8.5m Race to Protect Planes From Cosmic Rays
From ACM News

The $8.5m Race to Protect Planes From Cosmic Rays

It's an invisible, but looming threat from outer space: distant cosmic events that can cause a computer, or even an aircraft, to crash here on Earth.

UA-Developed Technology Helps Find Happy Middle Between Low Temps and High Bills
From ACM TechNews

UA-Developed Technology Helps Find Happy Middle Between Low Temps and High Bills

A monitor developed by researchers at the University of Arizona allows consumers to set the temperature in their homes based on how much they want to spend on electricity...

High-Performance Data Replication Across Cloud Servers
From ACM TechNews

High-Performance Data Replication Across Cloud Servers

Computer scientists in China have developed a system that can provide high-performance data replication across cloud servers. 

What Your Cell Phone Can't Tell the Police
From ACM Opinion

What Your Cell Phone Can't Tell the Police

On May 28th, Lisa Marie Roberts, of Portland, Oregon, was released from prison after serving nine and a half years for a murder she didn't commit.

The Space-Based Quantum Cryptography Race
From ACM News

The Space-Based Quantum Cryptography Race

One of the great benefits of quantum communication is the ability to send messages from one point in space to another with perfect security.

New N.s.a. Chief Calls Damage From Snowden Leaks Manageable
From ACM Opinion

New N.s.a. Chief Calls Damage From Snowden Leaks Manageable

The newly installed director of the National Security Agency says that while he has seen some terrorist groups alter their communications to avoid surveillance...

Researchers Find and Decode the Spy Tools Governments ­se to Hijack Phones
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Find and Decode the Spy Tools Governments ­se to Hijack Phones

A study of tools used by law enforcment and intelligence agencies to conduct surveillance on computer and mobile phone users revealed a wide range of functions. ...

Demonstrating a Driverless Future
From ACM TechNews

Demonstrating a Driverless Future

Researchers say they have developed one of the most advanced autonomous vehicles ever designed. 

New York Subway Cell Coverage Stinks, But Here Are the Best Lines
From ACM News

New York Subway Cell Coverage Stinks, But Here Are the Best Lines

The New York City subway system may run 24 hours a day and represent the most efficient means to get around the metropolis, but it has long been a sore spot for...

Ray Kurzweil Says He's Breathing Intelligence Into Google Search
From ACM Opinion

Ray Kurzweil Says He's Breathing Intelligence Into Google Search

The big announcements at Google's I/O event in San Francisco Wednesday didn't mention Web search, the technology that got the company started and made it so successful...

Make Robots ­seful By Teaching Them to Talk Like ­S
From ACM News

Make Robots ­seful By Teaching Them to Talk Like ­S

When Ashutosh Saxena wants some coffee or ice cream, he can ask a robot to make it for him.

The Quadriplegic Who Moved His Hand
From ACM News

The Quadriplegic Who Moved His Hand

Ian Burkhart was 19 and fearless and horsing around in the surf with friends on vacation in North Carolina’s Outer Banks when he mistimed a dive and a wave drove...

Larry Page on Google's Many Arms
From ACM Opinion

Larry Page on Google's Many Arms

One way to think of Google is as an extremely helpful, all-knowing, hyper-intelligent executive assistant.

E-Voting Experiments End in Norway Amid Security Fears
From ACM News

E-Voting Experiments End in Norway Amid Security Fears

Norway is ending trials of e-voting systems used in national and local elections.
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