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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.


Want a Terabyte Ipad? Then You'll Want to Read This
From ACM News

Want a Terabyte Ipad? Then You'll Want to Read This

In the latter half of the 19th century, the introduction of elevators and steel trusses enabled us to put up taller buildings with denser cores. It changed urban...

In Silicon Valley, Hardware Is Hot Again
From ACM Careers

In Silicon Valley, Hardware Is Hot Again

Since the mid-1990s Liam Casey, PCH International's chief executive officer, has helped technology companies with the nastiest task in Silicon Valley: building...

Melanin Considered for Bio-Friendly Electronics
From ACM TechNews

Melanin Considered for Bio-Friendly Electronics

University of Queensland researchers recently published a study that provides insight into the electrical properties of melanin and its biologically compatible...

Clothing the Body Electric
From ACM TechNews

Clothing the Body Electric

Electronics will be part of our wardrobe in the future, says University of South Carolina professor Xiaodong Li, who has turned the material in a cotton T-shirt...

A Code of Conduct, For Drones?
From ACM News

A Code of Conduct, For Drones?

It's a bird. It's a plane. Actually, it's a drone. And now those unmanned aircraft, best known for being used by the U.S. to kill terrorism suspects overseas, have...

Jobs vs. Gates, Redux
From ACM News

Jobs vs. Gates, Redux

It’s difficult to find two people who have had a greater influence on people’s lives than Steve Jobs and Bill Gates. 

Silicon Valley's Top Threat Is China, Survey Finds
From ACM TechNews

Silicon Valley's Top Threat Is China, Survey Finds

Many high-level technology executives are convinced that some other country, probably China, will supplant Silicon Valley as the global center for innovation within...

Google's Futuristic Glasses Move Closer to Reality
From ACM TechNews

Google's Futuristic Glasses Move Closer to Reality

Google recently announced that it is selling a prototype of its Internet-connected glasses, known as Google Glasses, to U.S. computer programmers for $1,500, hoping...

'leap Second' Bug Wreaks Havoc Across Web
From ACM News

'leap Second' Bug Wreaks Havoc Across Web

Reddit, Mozilla, Gawker, and possibly many other web outfits experienced brief technical problems on Saturday evening, when software underpinning their online operations...

Your E-Book Is Reading You
From ACM News

Your E-Book Is Reading You

It takes the average reader just seven hours to read the final book in Suzanne Collins's "Hunger Games" trilogy on the Kobo e-reader—about 57 pages an hour.

Researchers ­se Spoofing to 'hack' Into a Flying Drone
From ACM News

Researchers ­se Spoofing to 'hack' Into a Flying Drone

American researchers took control of a flying drone by hacking into its GPS system—acting on a $1,000 (£640) dare from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

A Robot Takes Stock
From ACM News

A Robot Takes Stock

The short figure creeping around the Carnegie Mellon University campus store in a hooded sweatshirt recently isn't some shoplifter, but a robot taking inventory...

From ACM News

A Look Inside Leap Motion, the 3D Gesture Control That's Like Kinect on Steroids

Leap Motion's not the household name Kinect is, but it should be; the company's motion-tracking system is more powerful, more accurate, smaller, cheaper, and just...

Minitel: The Rise and Fall of the France-Wide Web
From ACM News

Minitel: The Rise and Fall of the France-Wide Web

Many years ago, long before the birth of the Web, there was a time when France was the happening-est place in the digital universe.

Penn Researchers
From ACM TechNews

Penn Researchers

University of Pennsylvania researchers have developed a method for creating phase change materials, which could lead to more efficient and faster memory storage...

Design Reduces Nanowire Transistor Footprint
From ACM TechNews

Design Reduces Nanowire Transistor Footprint

A*STAR Institute of Microelectronics researchers have integrated two transistors onto a single vertical silicon nanowire, which they say could further push the...

It's Not an Entertainment Gadget, It's Google's Bid to Control the Future
From ACM News

It's Not an Entertainment Gadget, It's Google's Bid to Control the Future

Joe Britt hands me his latest creation, a black ball with glittering LED lights around the middle, and implores me to examine it.

Blade Runner: Which Predictions Have Come True?
From ACM News

Blade Runner: Which Predictions Have Come True?

Based on Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K Dick, Ridley Scott's Blade Runner—the tale of a hunt for four dangerous "replicant" humans—is a classic...

You Will Want Google Goggles
From ACM Opinion

You Will Want Google Goggles

At first glance, Thad Starner does not look out of place at Google. A pioneering researcher in the field of wearable computing, Starner is a big, charming man with...

How Many Computers to Identify a Cat? 16,000
From ACM News

How Many Computers to Identify a Cat? 16,000

Inside Google’s secretive X laboratory, known for inventing self-driving cars and augmented reality glasses, a small group of researchers began working several...
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