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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.


Five Open Source Technologies For 2012
From ACM TechNews

Five Open Source Technologies For 2012

Five open source projects could become the basis for new businesses and industries in 2012. 

Scientists Create Brain-Like, Massively Parallel Computer from Molecules
From ACM News

Scientists Create Brain-Like, Massively Parallel Computer from Molecules

If you thought Japan was merely the master of miniaturization, tentacles, and creepy robots, think again: A group of Japanese scientists have built a massively...

Computer Chips That Repair Themselves
From ACM News

Computer Chips That Repair Themselves

University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign researchers have created a self-healing method that fixes cracks or failures in the circuits of computer chips.

Rise of the Drone: From Calif. Garage to Multibillion-Dollar Defense Industry
From ACM News

Rise of the Drone: From Calif. Garage to Multibillion-Dollar Defense Industry

In 1980, Abraham Karem, an engineer who had emigrated from Israel, retreated into his three-car garage in Hacienda Heights outside Los Angeles and, to the bemusement...

The Touchy-Feely Future of Technology
From ACM News

The Touchy-Feely Future of Technology

In 1975, when then-composer and performer Bill Buxton started designing his own digital musical instruments, he had no way of knowing he was helping to spark...

Processors: What to Expect From Cpus in 2012
From ACM TechNews

Processors: What to Expect From Cpus in 2012

Analysts expect that the next generation of central processing units will offer more speed and consume less power. 

Revamping Storage Performance
From Communications of the ACM

Revamping Storage Performance

Great strides are being made in finding fast alternatives to the slow disks that dominate storage systems, but fast media are not nearly enough.

How Ibm Saw 2012 in 2007: Where's My Mind-Reading Cellphone?
From ACM News

How Ibm Saw 2012 in 2007: Where's My Mind-Reading Cellphone?

The brainiacs at IBM made some pretty far-out predictions this week: In five years, they say, you won't need passwords, there will be no more digital divide,...

No More Access to Google's Hadoop Cloud For Researchers
From ACM News

No More Access to Google's Hadoop Cloud For Researchers

Google announced it is ending its Academic Cloud Computing Initiative, a joint program with IBM and the National Science Foundation that gave researchers access...

Self-Healing Electronic Chip Tests May Aid Space Travel
From ACM News

Self-Healing Electronic Chip Tests May Aid Space Travel

Self-repairing electronic chips are one step closer, according to a team of U.S. researchers, creating a circuit that heals itself when cracked thanks to the...

Logging In With a Touch or a Phrase (anything but a Password)
From ACM News

Logging In With a Touch or a Phrase (anything but a Password)

Passwords are a pain to remember. What if a quick wiggle of five fingers on a screen could log you in instead? Or speaking a simple phrase?

The Tevatron's Enduring Computing Legacy
From ACM News

The Tevatron's Enduring Computing Legacy

Few laypeople think of computing innovation in connection with the Tevatron particle accelerator, which shut down earlier this year. Mention of the Tevatron inspires...

From ACM News

Bouncing Data Would Speed Up Data Centers

Inside the huge data centers operated by Internet companies like Google, Amazon, and Facebook, information is processed at blistering speed, but it still has to...

Mystery Men Forge Servers For Giants of Internet
From ACM News

Mystery Men Forge Servers For Giants of Internet

If you drive down highway 880 from Oakland, Calif., take an exit about 30 miles south, and snake past a long line of car dealerships, you’ll find an ordinary...

How the 10,000-Year Clock Measures Time
From ACM News

How the 10,000-Year Clock Measures Time

Ten thousand years is about the age of civilisation. Archaeologists have a few relics that have spanned this period, mostly stone tools and works of art. But...

Why We Don't Have Domestic Robots Yet
From ACM News

Why We Don't Have Domestic Robots Yet

On The Jetsons, Rosie was the robot maid with a heart of silicon and the voice of an aging cocktail waitress. She did everything: cook, clean, take care of the...

Why Apple's Acquisition of Anobit Matters
From ACM Opinion

Why Apple's Acquisition of Anobit Matters

Apple reportedly acquired the Israeli flash memory design firm Anobit in a deal that cost the company $500 million.

From ACM News

IBM Predicts Home Electricity From Your Bike, Mind-Reading Computers

There's something about the year-end reflective state of mind that causes tech companies and institutions (and pundits) to make predictions about what they think...

From ACM News

Quantum Computing with Holograms

Light is one of the most promising carriers of quantum information. It is robust against decoherence because it does not interact with stray electric and magnetic...

Pick Up the Phone, Nfl: The Future Is Calling
From ACM News

Pick Up the Phone, Nfl: The Future Is Calling

On the sidelines during every game, New York Jets cornerback Donald Strickland performs a trick familiar to any toddler who has ever held a flip book.
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