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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.


Nasa Confirms Evidence That Liquid Water Flows on Today's Mars
From ACM News

Nasa Confirms Evidence That Liquid Water Flows on Today's Mars

New findings from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) provide the strongest evidence yet that liquid water flows intermittently on present-day Mars.

Complex Car Software Becomes the Weak Spot ­nder the Hood
From ACM News

Complex Car Software Becomes the Weak Spot ­nder the Hood

Shwetak N. Patel looked over the 2013 Mercedes C300 and saw not a sporty all-wheel-drive sedan, but a bundle of technology.

Study Suggests London ­nderground May Be 'too Fast'
From ACM TechNews

Study Suggests London ­nderground May Be 'too Fast'

A computer model of the London Underground predicts trains that travel too fast compound congestion when key locations outside the city center become bottlenecks...

Election Polling: When 'who Will Win?' Beats 'who Do You Like?'
From ACM TechNews

Election Polling: When 'who Will Win?' Beats 'who Do You Like?'

Statisticians and political scientists are more reliant on the question, "Who do you think will actually win?" than "Who do you like?" when it comes to predictive...

Google AI Beats Humans at More Classic Arcade Games Than Ever Before
From ACM TechNews

Google AI Beats Humans at More Classic Arcade Games Than Ever Before

Google's DeepMind artificial intelligence has been upgraded to defeat human players in 1980s arcade games even better than before. 

Automotive Systems Get Smarter
From Communications of the ACM

Automotive Systems Get Smarter

Automotive infotainment systems are driving changes to automobiles, and to driver behavior.

Smaller, Faster, Cheaper, Over: The Future of Computer Chips
From ACM News

Smaller, Faster, Cheaper, Over: The Future of Computer Chips

At the inaugural International Solid-State Circuits Conference held on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia in 1960, a young computer engineer...

Intel Kills a Top-of-the-Line Processor
From ACM News

Intel Kills a Top-of-the-Line Processor

Economics trump performance in a chip with great potential.

Supercomputing's Super Energy Needs, and What to Do About Them
From ACM News

Supercomputing's Super Energy Needs, and What to Do About Them

The power it takes to drive petaflop machines could supply a small city with electricity.

­se of Personalized Cancer Drugs Runs Ahead of the Science
From ACM News

­se of Personalized Cancer Drugs Runs Ahead of the Science

As the costs of genetic sequencing fall, oncologists are starting to prescribe expensive new drugs that target the genetic profiles of their patients' tumours,...

Brain-Computer Link Enables Paralyzed California Man to Walk
From ACM News

Brain-Computer Link Enables Paralyzed California Man to Walk

A brain-to-computer technology that can translate thoughts into leg movements has enabled a man paralyzed from the waist down by a spinal cord injury to become...

Pentagon Intrigued By Breakthrough in Cloaking Technology
From ACM News

Pentagon Intrigued By Breakthrough in Cloaking Technology

An academic says he and his colleagues have demonstrated a major breakthrough in the quest for invisibility, and he has the military’s attention.

Federal Researchers Want to ­ntangle Internet of Things
From ACM TechNews

Federal Researchers Want to ­ntangle Internet of Things

The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology has released its Draft Framework for Cyber-Physical Systems. 

Protecting Identities in a Sea of Big Data
From ACM TechNews

Protecting Identities in a Sea of Big Data

New research projects by University of Arkansas computer scientist Xintao Wu could help ensure the identities of participants in genomic studies are shielded. 

Clumps of Gold Nanoparticals Can Evolve to Carry Out Computing
From ACM TechNews

Clumps of Gold Nanoparticals Can Evolve to Carry Out Computing

Researchers at the University of Twente in the Netherlands have found a loosely organized clump of gold nanoparticles can be made to do calculations.

Watch a Swarm of Drones Build a Rope Bridge
From ACM TechNews

Watch a Swarm of Drones Build a Rope Bridge

A team of drones has autonomously built a rope bridge, according to researchers at ETH Zurich. 

Rosetta Reveals Comet's Water-Ice Cycle
From ACM News

Rosetta Reveals Comet's Water-Ice Cycle

ESA's Rosetta spacecraft has provided evidence for a daily water-ice cycle on and near the surface of comets.

Vw Could Fool the Epa, But It Couldn't Trick Chemistry
From ACM News

Vw Could Fool the Epa, But It Couldn't Trick Chemistry

For decades, automakers have been caught between building an engine that squeezes a lot of energy out of the fuel it burns and one that has low emissions.

Researchers at Western ­niversity Hope to ­se Artificial Intelligence to Improve Breast Cancer Patient Outcomes
From ACM TechNews

Researchers at Western ­niversity Hope to ­se Artificial Intelligence to Improve Breast Cancer Patient Outcomes

Researchers at the University of Western Ontario believe artificial intelligence can help remove the guesswork from breast cancer treatment.  

Designing Electric and Magnetic Order For Low-Energy Computing
From ACM TechNews

Designing Electric and Magnetic Order For Low-Energy Computing

Researchers at the University of Liverpool say they have developed a new material that combines both electrical and magnetic order at room temperature.  
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