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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.


Diamond Idea For Quantum Computer
From ACM News

Diamond Idea For Quantum Computer

Quantum mechanics isn't what it used to be.

U.s. Ups Ante For Spying on Firms
From ACM News

U.s. Ups Ante For Spying on Firms

The White House threatened China and other countries with trade and diplomatic action over corporate espionage as it cataloged more than a dozen cases of cyberattacks...

Rise of the Swarm
From Communications of the ACM

Rise of the Swarm

Guided by collective intelligence, teams of small, simple robots could soon accomplish amazing feats.

DARPA Wants Teeny-Tiny Fluids to Cool Down Next-Gen Microchips
From ACM TechNews

DARPA Wants Teeny-Tiny Fluids to Cool Down Next-Gen Microchips

DARPA researchers want to embed stacked microchips with tiny fluid channels to circulate small drops of water as microfluidic cooling systems.

Nanotubes Seen as Alternative When Silicon Chips Hit Their Limits
From ACM TechNews

Nanotubes Seen as Alternative When Silicon Chips Hit Their Limits

A microelectronic circuit composed of 44 transistors made from carbon nanotubes demonstrates that nanotubes could be the best successor to silicon-based chips. 

The Road to Uncovering a Wartime Colossus
From ACM News

The Road to Uncovering a Wartime Colossus

The story of how the Colossus computer at Bletchley Park aided the allied code-cracking effort during World War II is becoming well known. Its claim to be a forerunner...

 DARPA Wants Teeny-Tiny Fluids to Cool Down Next-Gen Microchips
From ACM News

DARPA Wants Teeny-Tiny Fluids to Cool Down Next-Gen Microchips

The Pentagon's mad scientists have concocted a plan to keep the miniature, stacked brains of tomorrow's advanced computers cool enough to power next-gen technological...

Combining Quantum Information Communication and Storage
From ACM TechNews

Combining Quantum Information Communication and Storage

Aalto University researchers have taken the first step toward creating exotic mechanical quantum states. 

Welcome to the Malware-Industrial Complex
From ACM News

Welcome to the Malware-Industrial Complex

Every summer, computer security experts get together in Las Vegas for Black Hat and DEFCON, conferences that have earned notoriety for presentations demonstrating...

The Computer That Never Crashes
From ACM TechNews

The Computer That Never Crashes

University College London researchers have created what they describe as a self-repairing computer that could keep mission-critical systems working. 

Biological Connections in Microelectronics
From ACM TechNews

Biological Connections in Microelectronics

Researchers have developed a potential solution for miniaturizing electronic components based on basic cell processes. 

In Cyberwar, Software Flaws Are a Hot Commodity
From ACM News

In Cyberwar, Software Flaws Are a Hot Commodity

There have been security flaws in software as long as there has been software, but they have become even more critically important in the context of cyberweapons...

Cell Circuits Remember Their History
From ACM TechNews

Cell Circuits Remember Their History

MIT researchers have developed genetic circuits in bacterial cells that perform logic functions and remember the results.

U.S. Air Force Project Aims to Transform Supercomputing
From ACM TechNews

U.S. Air Force Project Aims to Transform Supercomputing

Virginia Tech professor Wu Feng is working to increase simulation speeds of computational fluid dynamics for the U.S. Air Force's micro air vehicles (MAVs) project...

Magnetoelectric Materials Promise Advances in Computing Technology
From ACM TechNews

Magnetoelectric Materials Promise Advances in Computing Technology

Argonne National Laboratory researchers have developed methods for controlling magnetic order in a specific class of materials called magnetoelectrics. 

Will We Ever Simulate the Human Brain?
From ACM News

Will We Ever Simulate the Human Brain?

For years, Henry Markram has claimed that he can simulate the human brain in a computer within a decade. On 23 January 2013, the European Commission told him to...

A Tiny Computer Attracts a Million Tinkerers
From ACM News

A Tiny Computer Attracts a Million Tinkerers

Raspberry Pi may sound like the name of a math-based dessert. But it is actually one of the hottest and cheapest little computers in the world right now.

­nseen, All-Out Cyber War on the ­.s. Has Begun
From ACM Opinion

­nseen, All-Out Cyber War on the ­.s. Has Begun

There's a war going on, and it's raging here at home—not in the streets or the fields, but on the Internet.

How to Build a Nanotube Computer
From ACM TechNews

How to Build a Nanotube Computer

IBM researchers have assembled 10,000 carbon nanotube transistors on a silicon chip, which they say is a breakthrough that could lead to a new way of producingView...

Phreaks and Geeks
From ACM Opinion

Phreaks and Geeks

One of the most heartfelt—and unexpected—remembrances of Aaron Swartz, who committed suicide last month at the age of 26, came from Yale professor Edward Tufte.
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