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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.


5 Mobile Technologies Help Level the Playing Field For People with Disabilities
From ACM News

5 Mobile Technologies Help Level the Playing Field For People with Disabilities

Mobile devices have become incredibly popular for their ability to weave modern conveniences such as Internet access and social networking into the fabric of daily...

How Baseball's Tech Team Built the Future of Television
From ACM Careers

How Baseball's Tech Team Built the Future of Television

It was the first week of April, 2015, and New York's Chelsea Market, typically packed with hordes of noisy tourists, was quiet. It was close to midnight, but five...

Caution ­rged Over Editing Dna in Wildlife (intentionally or Not)
From ACM News

Caution ­rged Over Editing Dna in Wildlife (intentionally or Not)

"Crap!" That was the first word out of Kevin Esvelt’s mouth as he scanned a paper1 published inScience last March.

For Mobile Messaging, GIFs Prove to Be Worth at Least a Thousand Words
From ACM News

For Mobile Messaging, GIFs Prove to Be Worth at Least a Thousand Words

Lucy Dikeou, a 21-year-old senior at Stanford University, has long used English and the pictorial images known as emoji to text on her iPhone.

Facing Islamic State Threat, Iraq Digitizes National Library
From ACM Careers

Facing Islamic State Threat, Iraq Digitizes National Library

The dimly lit, dust-caked stacks of the Baghdad National Library hide a treasure of the ages: crinkled, yellowing papers holding the true stories of sultans and...

New Army Cyber Officers Hack Improvements Into Darpa's 'plan X'
From ACM TechNews

New Army Cyber Officers Hack Improvements Into Darpa's 'plan X'

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's Plan X is a $120-million program to develop platforms to plan for, conduct, and assess cyberwarfare. 

Quantum Computing: Diode-Like Breakthrough Surmounts Roadblock
From ACM TechNews

Quantum Computing: Diode-Like Breakthrough Surmounts Roadblock

Niels Bohr Institute researchers have developed a diode-like component that enables single photons to be emitted and flow in only one direction. 

What a Comet Looks Like … From 9 Meters Away!
From ACM News

What a Comet Looks Like … From 9 Meters Away!

The European Space Agency has just released some fantastic close-up images taken by the Philae lander of the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

Military Robots: Armed, But How Dangerous?
From ACM News

Military Robots: Armed, But How Dangerous?

An open letter calling for a ban on lethal weapons controlled by artificially intelligent machines was signed last week by thousands of scientists and technologists...

Earth's Ancient Magnetic Field Just Got a Lot Older
From ACM News

Earth's Ancient Magnetic Field Just Got a Lot Older

Earth developed a magnetic field at least four billion years ago, the latest research shows—more than half a billion years earlier than thought.

China to Restrict Drone, Supercomputer Exports
From ACM News

China to Restrict Drone, Supercomputer Exports

China will restrict the export of drones and supercomputers from Aug. 15 to help protect national security out of fears such equipment could fall into the hands...

Beyond Just 'big' Data
From ACM TechNews

Beyond Just 'big' Data

As big data technologies advance and the challenges of extracting meaning from these data sets shift, computer scientists will need new vocabulary. 

Study Shows Co-Operative Robots Learn and Adapt Quickly Through Natural Language
From ACM TechNews

Study Shows Co-Operative Robots Learn and Adapt Quickly Through Natural Language

Robots can learn and adjust rapidly to their surroundings solely via natural-language processing, according to a new study. 

­cf-Developed Software Analyzes Fat in Seconds
From ACM TechNews

­cf-Developed Software Analyzes Fat in Seconds

New computer-vision techniques can give doctors a more complete analysis of fat than images alone. 

Facial Recognition Tool 'works in Darkness'
From ACM TechNews

Facial Recognition Tool 'works in Darkness'

A new tool can identify people in complete darkness by using their thermal signature and matching infrared images with ordinary photos.

Big Data Challenge For Food Resilience
From ACM TechNews

Big Data Challenge For Food Resilience

Microsoft Research and the U.S. Department of Agriculture have launched a contest aimed at exploring the impact of climate change on the U.S. food system. 

Flying Robots That Can See
From ACM News

Flying Robots That Can See

A tiny artificial eye inspired by the vision systems of insects could help small flying drones navigate their surroundings well enough to avoid collisions while...

Crumb of Mouse Brain Reconstructed in Full Detail
From ACM News

Crumb of Mouse Brain Reconstructed in Full Detail

Six years might seem like a long time to spend piecing together the structure of a scrap of tissue vastly smaller than a bead of sweat.

For Sympathetic Ear, More Chinese Turn to Smartphone Program
From ACM News

For Sympathetic Ear, More Chinese Turn to Smartphone Program

She is known as Xiaoice, and millions of young Chinese pick up their smartphones every day to exchange messages with her, drawn to her knowing sense of humor and...

Turing Award-Winner Stonebraker on the Future of Taming Big Data
From ACM TechNews

Turing Award-Winner Stonebraker on the Future of Taming Big Data

2014 ACM A.M. Turing Award recipient Michael Stonebraker says the future of big data usage hinges on several factors. 
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