acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

News


bg-corner

An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


Communications Satellites Made Legal For Export
From ACM Careers

Communications Satellites Made Legal For Export

To the delight of American satellite makers, communications satellites—which orbit Earth to relay phone calls, link ships to shore and broadcast television programs—will...

Popular Office Phones Vulnerable to Eavesdropping Hack, Researchers Say
From ACM News

Popular Office Phones Vulnerable to Eavesdropping Hack, Researchers Say

High-tech telephones common on many workplace desks in the U.S. can be hacked and turned into eavesdropping devices, researchers at Columbia University have discovered...

Military Must Prep Now For 'mutant' Future, Researchers Warn
From ACM News

Military Must Prep Now For 'mutant' Future, Researchers Warn

The U.S. military is already using, or fast developing, a wide range of technologies meant to give troops what California Polytechnic State University researcher...

Google Cleared of Search Results Bias After 2-Year U.s. Investigation
From ACM News

Google Cleared of Search Results Bias After 2-Year U.s. Investigation

Google has been forced by regulators in the U.S. to agree to legally binding changes to the way it presents some search results and runs its search advertising...

What Turned Jaron Lanier Against the Web?
From ACM Opinion

What Turned Jaron Lanier Against the Web?

I couldn't help thinking of John Le Carré's spy novels as I awaited my rendezvous with Jaron Lanier in a corner of the lobby of the stylish W Hotel just off Union...

Never-Before-Seen Stage of Planetary Birth Revealed
From ACM News

Never-Before-Seen Stage of Planetary Birth Revealed

Astronomers studying a newborn star have caught a detailed glimpse of planets forming around it, revealing a never-before seen stage of planetary evolution.

Robotic 'pack Mule' Would Relieve Equipment Burden For Soldier in the Field
From ACM TechNews

Robotic 'pack Mule' Would Relieve Equipment Burden For Soldier in the Field

DARPA researchers are developing the Legged Squad Support System, a robotic system designed to carry 400 pounds of equipment, walk 20 miles at a time, and serve...

Pentagon Looks to Fix 'pervasive Vulnerability' in Drones
From ACM TechNews

Pentagon Looks to Fix 'pervasive Vulnerability' in Drones

The U.S.'s fleet of robotic drone aircraft has a "pervasive vulnerability" because their control algorithms are written in a fundamentally insecure manner, according...

Outmaneuvered at Their Own Game, Antivirus Makers Struggle to Adapt
From ACM News

Outmaneuvered at Their Own Game, Antivirus Makers Struggle to Adapt

The antivirus industry has a dirty little secret: its products are often not very good at stopping viruses.

Marking the Birth of the Modern-Day Internet
From ACM Opinion

Marking the Birth of the Modern-Day Internet

A long time ago, my colleagues and I became part of a great adventure, teamed with a small band of scientists and technologists in the U.S. and elsewhere.

Ftc Offers $50,000 Reward to Help Stop Robocalls
From ACM Careers

Ftc Offers $50,000 Reward to Help Stop Robocalls

Unwanted telemarketing calls, trademarked for interrupting dinners across the nation, have become such a nuisance over the years that the Federal Trade Commission...

How To Charge Your Laptop
From ACM Opinion

How To Charge Your Laptop

Whether they're in our computers, cell phones, or cars, the only time we think about batteries is when they're almost dead and we need to find some place to charge...

Privacy by the Numbers: A New Approach to Safeguarding Data
From ACM News

Privacy by the Numbers: A New Approach to Safeguarding Data

In 1997, when Massachusetts began making health records of state employees available to medical researchers, the government removed patients' names, addresses,...

Can China Prevent Web Pseudonyms? Probably Not
From ACM News

Can China Prevent Web Pseudonyms? Probably Not

Chinese Internet cops are at it again.

Scientists Construct First Map of How the Brain Organizes Everything We See
From ACM News

Scientists Construct First Map of How the Brain Organizes Everything We See

Our eyes may be our window to the world, but how do we make sense of the thousands of images that flood our retinas each day?

­niversity Wins Record $1.17 Billion Verdict Against Marvell Semiconductor
From ACM News

­niversity Wins Record $1.17 Billion Verdict Against Marvell Semiconductor

A Pittsburgh jury found that hard drive control chips made by Marvell Semiconductor infringe two patents owned by Carnegie Mellon University.

Classical Computing Embraces Quantum Ideas
From ACM News

Classical Computing Embraces Quantum Ideas

Someday, quantum computers may be able to solve complex optimization problems, quickly mine huge data sets, simulate the kind of physics experiments that currently...

Ford Engineers Have 3D Printers on Their Desks. When Will You Get One?
From ACM Opinion

Ford Engineers Have 3D Printers on Their Desks. When Will You Get One?

Ford has caught the DIY revolution and now puts 3D printers at workstations for its engineers.

Engineers Working to Prevent Heat Buildup Within 3-D Integrated Circuits
From ACM TechNews

Engineers Working to Prevent Heat Buildup Within 3-D Integrated Circuits

University of Texas Arlington researchers are working to minimize the heat generated by silicon chips, and will then develop nano-windows that allow the heat to...

Simulating the Future of Fuel
From ACM TechNews

Simulating the Future of Fuel

University of Texas at Austin researchers are using first-principles-based, atomic-level computer simulations to improve the efficiency of fuel cells. 
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account