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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.


Time Lords: The Clocks That Rule Our World
From ACM News

Time Lords: The Clocks That Rule Our World

Time is money—and never was this clearer than at 09:59:59.985 Eastern Time, on 3 June 2013.

If Software Looks Like a Brain and Acts Like a Brain—will We Treat It Like One?
From ACM News

If Software Looks Like a Brain and Acts Like a Brain—will We Treat It Like One?

Long the domain of science fiction, researchers are now working to create software that perfectly models human and animal brains.

Obama Calls For New Cooperation to Wrangle the 'wild West' Internet
From ACM TechNews

Obama Calls For New Cooperation to Wrangle the 'wild West' Internet

President Barrack Obama has called on the private sector to take greater steps to share information about cybersecurity threats. 

Star Buzzed Solar System During Human Prehistory
From ACM News

Star Buzzed Solar System During Human Prehistory

A recently discovered stellar neighbour of the Sun penetrated the extreme fringes of the Solar System—the closest encounter ever documented—at around the time that...

Stanford Engineer Produces Free Braille-Writer App
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Engineer Produces Free Braille-Writer App

Stanford University researchers have developed iBrailler Notes, an iPad app they say is the world's first Braille writing platform designed for a tablet computer...

Apple Gears ­p to Challenge Tesla in Electronic Cars
From ACM TechNews

Apple Gears ­p to Challenge Tesla in Electronic Cars

Apple reportedly has several hundred of its employees working on a project to create a new Apple-branded electric vehicle. 

Rare Alan Turing Journal Shows His Genius at Work
From ACM TechNews

Rare Alan Turing Journal Shows His Genius at Work

Two decades after its discovery, a rare handwritten journal belonging to computing pioneer Alan Turing will be auctioned off this spring in San Francisco. 

Did Nsa Plant Spyware in Computers Around World?
From ACM News

Did Nsa Plant Spyware in Computers Around World?

Did the National Security Agency plant spyware deep in the hard drives of thousands of computers used by foreign governments, banks and other surveillance targets...

Hoping Google's Lab Is a Rainmaker
From ACM Careers

Hoping Google's Lab Is a Rainmaker

Google's research arm, Google X, is called the company's Moonshot Factory. One reason the company picked the word "Moonshot" was to remind people to tackle big...

Bringing Coding to Kindergarten
From ACM News

Bringing Coding to Kindergarten

How young is too young to learn to write software?

Exotic States Materialize With Supercomputers
From ACM TechNews

Exotic States Materialize With Supercomputers

Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers have used supercomputers to find a new class of materials that possess an exotic state of matter. 

To Avert Another Heartbleed, Open Source Group Narrows List of Projects in Need of Support
From ACM TechNews

To Avert Another Heartbleed, Open Source Group Narrows List of Projects in Need of Support

The Core Infrastructure Initiative was formed to identify and provide extra funding to critical open source projects that need help ensuring the security of their...

Google Retires Spdy in Favor of Http/2
From ACM TechNews

Google Retires Spdy in Favor of Http/2

Google plans to phase out its SPDY open networking protocol in early 2016 and instead support HTTP/2 in Chrome. 

Cynthia Breazeal: Social Robotics Pioneer. MIT Lab Leader. Proud Mom
From ACM TechNews

Cynthia Breazeal: Social Robotics Pioneer. MIT Lab Leader. Proud Mom

In an interview, Cynthia Breazeal, director of the robotics lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and creator of the Jibo family robot, explores her...

In Image-Guided Operating Suites, Surgeons See Real-Time Mri, Ct Scans
From ACM News

In Image-Guided Operating Suites, Surgeons See Real-Time Mri, Ct Scans

Surgeons sometimes fly blind when operating on hard-to-reach anatomical parts or hard-to-see conditions.

The Coming Boom In Brain Medicines
From ACM News

The Coming Boom In Brain Medicines

Tony Coles could have had any job he wanted in the drug industry.

European Languages Linked to Migration from the East
From ACM News

European Languages Linked to Migration from the East

A mysterious group of humans from the east stormed western Europe 4,500 years ago—bringing with them technologies such as the wheel, as well as a language that...

How to Interest Girls in Computer Science and Engineering? Shift the Stereotypes
From ACM TechNews

How to Interest Girls in Computer Science and Engineering? Shift the Stereotypes

A University of Washington study identifies inaccurate, negative stereotypes as the key culprits in the underrepresentation of women in computer science and engineering...

Vint Cerf Warns of 'digital Dark Age'
From ACM TechNews

Vint Cerf Warns of 'digital Dark Age'

Former ACM president Vint Cerf worries a forthcoming "digital Dark Age" will leave behind mountains of data people will no longer be able to access. 

Robots Can Build Cars; Now They Learn Not to Crush You
From ACM News

Robots Can Build Cars; Now They Learn Not to Crush You

Robots long ago earned a place in factories, where their pneumatic pumps and steel welding arms help manufacture everything from cars to planes.
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