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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.


College Basketball Data Aplenty for Those Who Can Afford It
From ACM Careers

College Basketball Data Aplenty for Those Who Can Afford It

When Butler fell a precious few inches short of winning a national championship in 2010, its players took the court during that season believing they were the most...

Could Diamonds Be a Computer’s Best Friend?
From ACM TechNews

Could Diamonds Be a Computer’s Best Friend?

Researchers have demonstrated that information can flow through a diamond wire, a finding that could lead to the material's use in computing. 

N.S.A. Breached Chinese Servers Seen as Security Threat
From ACM News

N.S.A. Breached Chinese Servers Seen as Security Threat

American officials have long considered Huawei, the Chinese telecommunications giant, a security threat, blocking it from business deals in the United States for...

Parallel Programming May Not Be So Daunting
From ACM TechNews

Parallel Programming May Not Be So Daunting

Researchers plan to demonstrate an analytics technique suggesting that, in a wide range of real-word scenarios, lock-free algorithms can provide wait-free performance...

Speech-to-Speech Translations Stutter, But Researchers See Mellifluous Future
From Communications of the ACM

Speech-to-Speech Translations Stutter, But Researchers See Mellifluous Future

The practical need for accurate instant or simultaneous machine translations continues to grow as applications multiply.

Revelations of N.s.a. Spying Cost ­.s. Tech Companies
From ACM News

Revelations of N.s.a. Spying Cost ­.s. Tech Companies

Microsoft has lost customers, including the government of Brazil.

Graphene Helps Copper Wires Keep Their Cool
From ACM News

Graphene Helps Copper Wires Keep Their Cool

When people in the chip industry talk about the thermal problems in computer processors, they get dramatic.

Building Bicep2: A Conversation with Jamie Bock
From ACM Opinion

Building Bicep2: A Conversation with Jamie Bock

Caltech Professor of Physics Jamie Bock and his collaborators announced on March 17, 2014 that they have successfully measured a B-mode polarization signal in the...

The $1,000 Genome
From ACM News

The $1,000 Genome

In Silicon Valley, Moore's law seems to stand on equal footing with the natural laws codified by Isaac Newton.

Why Mh370 Could Still Talk to Satellites After Its Other Comms Went Dark
From ACM News

Why Mh370 Could Still Talk to Satellites After Its Other Comms Went Dark

It's the latest mystery in the hunt for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: Was a key communications system on board the plane disabled before or after the co-pilot calmly...

Nasa Historic Earth Images Still Hold Research Value
From ACM News

Nasa Historic Earth Images Still Hold Research Value

NASA's Seasat satellite became history long ago, but it left a legacy of images of Earth's ocean, volcanoes, forests and other features that were made by the first...

Three Questions For Leslie Lamport, Winner of Computing's Top Prize
From ACM Opinion

Three Questions For Leslie Lamport, Winner of Computing's Top Prize

This year's winner of the Turing Award—often referred to as the Nobel Prize of computing—was announced yesterday as Leslie Lamport, a computer scientist whose research...

'ultracold' Molecules Promising For Quantum Computing, Simulation
From ACM TechNews

'ultracold' Molecules Promising For Quantum Computing, Simulation

Researchers say they have developed a method of using lasers to cool atoms, a process that could be applied to quantum computing and advanced simulations. 

The Search For Life Across the ­niverse
From ACM Opinion

The Search For Life Across the ­niverse

When Jeremy Drake was beginning his career in the late 1980s, the question of whether or not we are alone in the universe still seemed beyond the realm of scienc...

Nasa Technology Views Birth of the Universe
From ACM News

Nasa Technology Views Birth of the Universe

Astronomers are announcing today that they have acquired the first direct evidence that gravitational waves rippled through our infant universe during an explosive...

All Hacking Eyes on the Prize Money at Cansecwest
From ACM Careers

All Hacking Eyes on the Prize Money at Cansecwest

When it comes to hacking, it turns out that greed really is good.

Scientists Build Thinnest-Possible Leds to Be Stronger, More Energy Efficient
From ACM TechNews

Scientists Build Thinnest-Possible Leds to Be Stronger, More Energy Efficient

University of Washington researchers say they have developed the thinnest-known light-emitting diode that can be used as a source of light energy in electronics...

Where in the Solar System Are We Most Likely to Find Life?
From ACM News

Where in the Solar System Are We Most Likely to Find Life?

Last week, NASA announced one of its most exciting missions in recent memory: a plan to visit Europa, one of Jupiter's largest moons.

Stanford Students Show Phone Record Surveillance Can Yield Vast Amounts of Information
From ACM News

Stanford Students Show Phone Record Surveillance Can Yield Vast Amounts of Information

The National Security Agency's mass surveillance of telephone metadata could yield detailed information about the private lives of individuals far beyond what the...

Missing Malaysia Jet Adds Fuel to 'live Black Box' Debate
From ACM News

Missing Malaysia Jet Adds Fuel to 'live Black Box' Debate

Regardless of what caused a Malaysia Airlines jet to disappear from the sky over the weekend, air-safety experts predict it will reignite debate over new technology...
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