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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.


­WM Discovery Advances Graphene-Based Electronics
From ACM TechNews

­WM Discovery Advances Graphene-Based Electronics

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee researchers have discovered a new carbon-based material that could lead to the next generation of electronics.  

Ghent ­niversity and Imec Report Open Source Software Release of Ipkiss
From ACM TechNews

Ghent ­niversity and Imec Report Open Source Software Release of Ipkiss

Researchers at the Interuniversity Microelectronics Center and Ghent University recently launched IPKISS, a generic and modular open source software framework for...

Simulating Tomorrow's Chips
From ACM News

Simulating Tomorrow's Chips

Most computer chips today have anywhere from four to 10 separate cores, or processing units, which can work in parallel, increasing the chips' efficiency. But the...

The Technology That Allowed the Titanic Survivors to Survive
From ACM News

The Technology That Allowed the Titanic Survivors to Survive

More than 1,500 people died in the sinking of the Titanic, but more than 700 survived. Those who did owed their escape to the newest communications technology of...

Quantum Computing: Is It Possible, and Should You Care?
From ACM News

Quantum Computing: Is It Possible, and Should You Care?

What is a quantum computer and when can I have one?

How to Handle Asteroid Threats
From ACM News

How to Handle Asteroid Threats

How do you solve a problem like Apophis?

Pentagon Eyes Augmented Reality Displays
From ACM News

Pentagon Eyes Augmented Reality Displays

The Defense Department has reportedly ordered augmented-reality displays from startup Innovega, only a week after Google disclosed its own augmented-reality project...

Asimov's Robots Live on Twenty Years After His Death
From ACM TechNews

Asimov's Robots Live on Twenty Years After His Death

In the two decades since the passing of science fiction author Isaac Asimov, his concept of robots programmed to meet certain safety standards has become a touchstone...

A Quantum Network Built with Two Atoms and Fiber Optic Cable
From ACM News

A Quantum Network Built with Two Atoms and Fiber Optic Cable

In an ordinary computer network, data in the form of binary numbers are transferred from one machine (node) to another via some sort of electronic signal, either...

Israel's Rocket-Hunting Ace Got His Start Playing Warcraft
From ACM News

Israel's Rocket-Hunting Ace Got His Start Playing Warcraft

While many of the boys in Idan Yahya's high school class were buffing up and preparing themselves for selection into elite combat units, this gawky teenager was...

Computer Scientists Build Computer ­sing Swarms of Crabs
From ACM TechNews

Computer Scientists Build Computer ­sing Swarms of Crabs

Kobe University researchers have built a billiard ball computer using soldier crabs.

Humans vs. Robots: Who Should Dominate Space Exploration?
From ACM News

Humans vs. Robots: Who Should Dominate Space Exploration?

The most recent footprints on the moon are 40 years old, and the next artificial mark on the lunar surface will probably be made by a robot’s wheels rather than...

Chips as Mini Internets
From ACM TechNews

Chips as Mini Internets

MIT researchers have established theoretical limits on the efficiency of packet-switched on-chip communication networks, and have presented measurements from a...

Will We Ever Create a Perfect Lie Detector?
From ACM News

Will We Ever Create a Perfect Lie Detector?

To create machines that can always tell when someone is lying, we need to know much more about what goes on in our brains.

Nasa Views Our Perpetually Moving Ocean
From ACM News

Nasa Views Our Perpetually Moving Ocean

The swirling flows of Earth's perpetually changing ocean come to life in a new NASA scientific visualization that captures the movement of tens of thousands of...

Ford Is Ready For the Autonomous Car. Are Drivers?
From ACM News

Ford Is Ready For the Autonomous Car. Are Drivers?

The auto industry has already developed all the technology necessary to create truly autonomous vehicles, Ford engineers claim.

Seeking Robots to Go Where First Responders Can't
From ACM News

Seeking Robots to Go Where First Responders Can't

In the event of another disaster at a nuclear power plant, the first responders may not be humans but robots.

A Little Device That's Trying to Read Your Thoughts
From ACM News

A Little Device That's Trying to Read Your Thoughts

Already surrounded by machines that allow him, painstakingly, to communicate, the physicist Stephen Hawking last summer donned what looked like a rakish black headband...

Stanford Study to Try Cold Cash and Social Game to Relieve Rush Hour Traffic
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Study to Try Cold Cash and Social Game to Relieve Rush Hour Traffic

Stanford University's Capri project aims to motivate people to avoid rush hour traffic by offering a chance at a large reward instead of a guaranteed small payout...

Robotic Design and Production as Easy as 1-2-3
From ACM TechNews

Robotic Design and Production as Easy as 1-2-3

Researchers at Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and the University of Pennsylvania are developing technology that could make...
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