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.


Human Cruise Control App Steers People on Their Way
From ACM News

Human Cruise Control App Steers People on Their Way

For a few days last summer, a handful of students walked through a park behind the University of Hannover in Germany.

Nature's Patterns: Golden Spirals and Branching Fractals
From ACM News

Nature's Patterns: Golden Spirals and Branching Fractals

Certain patterns, such as the fractal, are repeated over and over in nature—with some spectacular contrasts on wildly different scales.

Up Against Laws of Physics, Bell Labs Pushes Network Performance
From ACM News

Up Against Laws of Physics, Bell Labs Pushes Network Performance

By using more spectrum and developing new ways to send multiple channels of data at the same time, researchers at Bell Labs are working to increase bandwidths over...

If Algorithms Know All, How Much Should Humans Help?
From ACM Careers

If Algorithms Know All, How Much Should Humans Help?

Armies of the finest minds in computer science have dedicated themselves to improving the odds of making a sale.

U.s. Nuclear Fears Block Intel China Supercomputer Update
From ACM News

U.s. Nuclear Fears Block Intel China Supercomputer Update

The U.S. government has refused to let Intel help China update the world's biggest supercomputer.

The Solar System and Beyond Is Awash in Water
From ACM News

The Solar System and Beyond Is Awash in Water

As NASA missions explore our solar system and search for new worlds, they are finding water in surprising places.

Better Sensors For Medical Imaging, Contraband Detection
From ACM News

Better Sensors For Medical Imaging, Contraband Detection

MIT researchers have developed a new, ultrasensitive magnetic-field detector that is 1,000 times more energy-efficient than its predecessors. It could lead to miniaturized...

Online Test-Takers Feel Anti-Cheating Software's ­neasy Glare
From ACM Careers

Online Test-Takers Feel Anti-Cheating Software's ­neasy Glare

Before Betsy Chao, a senior here at Rutgers University, could take midterm exams in her online courses this semester, her instructors sent emails directing students...

Jay Edelson, the Class-Action Lawyer Who May Be Tech's Least Friended Man
From ACM Careers

Jay Edelson, the Class-Action Lawyer Who May Be Tech's Least Friended Man

When technology executives imagine the boogeyman, they see a baby-face guy in wire-rim glasses. His name is Jay Edelson.

Teaching a Computer Not to Forget
From ACM News

Teaching a Computer Not to Forget

Imagine if every time you learned something new, you completely forgot how to do a thing you'd already learned.

Puzzle of Moon's Origin Resolved
From ACM News

Puzzle of Moon's Origin Resolved

A nagging problem at the heart of the leading theory of how the Moon formed seems to have been explained away.

Mlb Is Supercharging Its Stats System with Radar and AI
From ACM News

Mlb Is Supercharging Its Stats System with Radar and AI

For all the Brad Pitt-fueled hype, sabermetric analysis is still only as good as the systems that capture data from the field—who hit what to whom.

Is Your Robot a Little Cheeky? Google May Build It That Way
From ACM TechNews

Is Your Robot a Little Cheeky? Google May Build It That Way

Google is developing robots that have individual personalities. 

Planes Without Pilots
From ACM TechNews

Planes Without Pilots

Modern airplanes are highly automated, but some researchers say there is room to automate planes even further.

Coding For a More Open Cuba
From ACM TechNews

Coding For a More Open Cuba

Technology experts will gather at Facebook's Menlo Park, CA, headquarters later this month to participate in the Code for Cuba hackathon. 

Connecting Vehicles
From ACM TechNews

Connecting Vehicles

Oak Ridge National Laboratory researchers are developing a computational framework for connected-vehicle technologies that facilitates communication. 

Dawn in Excellent Shape One Month After Ceres Arrival
From ACM News

Dawn in Excellent Shape One Month After Ceres Arrival

Since its capture by the gravity of dwarf planet Ceres on March 6, NASA's Dawn spacecraft has performed flawlessly, continuing to thrust with its ion engine as...

Planes Without Pilots
From ACM News

Planes Without Pilots

Mounting evidence that the co-pilot crashed a Germanwings plane into a French mountain has prompted a global debate about how to better screen crewmembers for mental...

Brain Compass Implant Gives Blind Rats Psychic Gps
From ACM News

Brain Compass Implant Gives Blind Rats Psychic Gps

Who needs sight to get around when you've got a digital compass in your head?

­niversity Receives Grant to Prevent Cyberbullying
From ACM TechNews

­niversity Receives Grant to Prevent Cyberbullying

Rutgers University has received a U.S. National Science Foundation grant to develop a system that automatically detects cyberbullying. 
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account