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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.


Image Analysis May Allow Pathologists to Expedite Diagnoses
From ACM TechNews

Image Analysis May Allow Pathologists to Expedite Diagnoses

Pennsylvania State University researchers are using image recognition technology to develop an automated method of classifying histopathological images.

Robots That Perceive the World Like Humans
From ACM TechNews

Robots That Perceive the World Like Humans

UPV/EHU-University researchers are studying how to improve robot behavior by means of perception models that are closer to those of humans.  

Ftc Offers $50,000 to Robocall Killers
From ACM Careers

Ftc Offers $50,000 to Robocall Killers

The Federal Trade Commission is offering a cash reward of $50,000 to whoever develops a solution to block robotic calling on both landlines and mobiles.

Women Use Emoticons More Than Men in Text Messaging :-)
From ACM TechNews

Women Use Emoticons More Than Men in Text Messaging :-)

Rice University researchers have found that women are twice as likely as men to use emoticons in text messages.  

The Internet of Things Will Transform Our Everyday
From ACM TechNews

The Internet of Things Will Transform Our Everyday

VTT researchers have developed several ubiquitous computing technologies, such as situation awareness for portable devices, mixed and augmented reality, and interoperability...

Science in an Election Year
From ACM Opinion

Science in an Election Year

More than a dozen science and engineering organizations worked with ScienceDebate.org to draft 14 top science questions to ask the two main presidential candidates...

Remembering Jon Postel—and the Day He Hijacked the Internet
From ACM News

Remembering Jon Postel—and the Day He Hijacked the Internet

One January day in 1998, Jon Postel emailed eight of the 12 organizations that handled the address books for the entire internet.

Who Controls the Internet?
From ACM News

Who Controls the Internet?

Have you ever noticed that wherever you are in the world, every telephone keypad looks the same? Or wondered why satellites don't crash into each other? Or why...

Advanced Computer Simulator Aids in Emergency Service Management
From ACM TechNews

Advanced Computer Simulator Aids in Emergency Service Management

Researchers in the Autonomous University of Barcelona's High Performance Computing for Efficient Applications and Simulation group have devised a computer simulator...

Report Sees Decline in Voting Glitches ... but Vote-By-Mail Sparks Concern
From ACM News

Report Sees Decline in Voting Glitches ... but Vote-By-Mail Sparks Concern

The good news about voting technologyis that the upgrades put into place since the controversial 2000 presidential election have made ballot tallies twice as accurate...

But How Do You Really Feel? Someday the Computer May Know
From ACM TechNews

But How Do You Really Feel? Someday the Computer May Know

Affective computing is an emerging technology that aims to give computers the ability to read users' emotions.  

Next-Gen Touchpads Respond to Pressure
From ACM TechNews

Next-Gen Touchpads Respond to Pressure

Researchers presenting at the recent User Interface Software Technology conference demonstrated projects that took advantage of Synaptics' new pressure-sensitive...

The Future, as Imagined by Google
From ACM News

The Future, as Imagined by Google

In Eric E. Schmidt's future, his life will be a lot easier.

Why Is This Man Running For President of the Internet?
From ACM Opinion

Why Is This Man Running For President of the Internet?

It's an unseasonably cold early October evening in Lincoln, Nebraska, and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian is giving his elevator pitch to a flustered but rapt...

Using Cell Phone Data to Curb the Spread of Malaria
From ACM TechNews

Using Cell Phone Data to Curb the Spread of Malaria

Researchers at HSPH and seven other institutions used cell phone data in Kenya to investigate how people's travel patterns contribute to the spread of malaria....

Chips That Melt in Your Body, Not in Your Hands
From ACM News

Chips That Melt in Your Body, Not in Your Hands

Welcome to the brave new world of transient electonics. 

Campaigns Mine Personal Lives to Get Out Vote
From ACM News

Campaigns Mine Personal Lives to Get Out Vote

Strategists affiliated with the Obama and Romney campaigns say they have access to information about the personal lives of voters at a scale never before imagined...

How I Accidentally Helped Compromise the Secret Keys of High-Security Handcuffs
From ACM Opinion

How I Accidentally Helped Compromise the Secret Keys of High-Security Handcuffs

In the age of freely available modeling software, laser cutters and 3D printers, shapes that must stay secret for security's sake don't stay secret for long. Especially...

Pentagon Scientists: We Can't Predict Violent Outbursts. Yet.
From ACM News

Pentagon Scientists: We Can't Predict Violent Outbursts. Yet.

In the years to come, a top group of military scientists believe, the Pentagon may be able to use genomics and bio-markers to spot when a soldier is about to snap...

Leon Panetta on Cybersecurity: D.C. Action Needed
From ACM News

Leon Panetta on Cybersecurity: D.C. Action Needed

While Joe Biden and Paul Ryan were duking it out last Thursday night over U.S. troops in Iraq, Afghanistan and beyond, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta was warning...
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