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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.


Would You Bet Against Sex Robots? AI 'could Leave Half of World ­nemployed'
From ACM News

Would You Bet Against Sex Robots? AI 'could Leave Half of World ­nemployed'

Machines could put more than half the world's population out of a job in the next 30 years, according to a computer scientist who said on Saturday that artificial...

Particles in Love: Quantum Mechanics Explored in New Study
From ACM News

Particles in Love: Quantum Mechanics Explored in New Study

Here's a love story at the smallest scales imaginable: particles of light.

Gravitational Waves Exist: The Inside Story of How Scientists Finally Found Them
From ACM News

Gravitational Waves Exist: The Inside Story of How Scientists Finally Found Them

Just over a billion years ago, many millions of galaxies from here, a pair of black holes collided.

How Google Searches Pretty Much Nailed the New Hampshire Primary
From ACM News

How Google Searches Pretty Much Nailed the New Hampshire Primary

Google's ability to look into the future of political contests just notched another win: New Hampshire.

Our Hidden Neandertal Dna May Increase Risk of Allergies, Depression
From ACM News

Our Hidden Neandertal Dna May Increase Risk of Allergies, Depression

Depressed? Your inner Neandertal may be to blame.

Einstein's Gravitational Waves Found at Last
From ACM News

Einstein's Gravitational Waves Found at Last

One hundred years after Albert Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves, scientists have finally spotted these elusive ripples in space-time.

Transistors Minus Semiconductors
From ACM TechNews

Transistors Minus Semiconductors

Michigan Technological University professor Yoke Khin Yap has developed a room-temperature approach to harnessing tunneling field-effect transistors. 

The Chips Are Down For Moore's Law
From ACM News

The Chips Are Down For Moore's Law

Next month, the worldwide semiconductor industry will formally acknowledge what has become increasingly obvious to everyone involved: Moore's law, the principle...

Scientists Debate Signatures of Alien Life
From ACM News

Scientists Debate Signatures of Alien Life

Huddled in a coffee shop one drizzly Seattle morning six years ago, the astrobiologist Shawn Domagal-Goldman stared blankly at his laptop screen, paralyzed.

­S Military: Robot Wars
From ACM News

­S Military: Robot Wars

When historians come to write about technological innovation in the first half of this century, they are likely to pay special attention to a US Navy drone called...

Mind-Reading Tech Helps Beginners Quickly Learn to Play Bach
From ACM News

Mind-Reading Tech Helps Beginners Quickly Learn to Play Bach

Every potential virtuoso needs a mentor. It just so happens that this one is a computer.

3D-Printed Display Lets Blind People Explore Images By Touch
From ACM News

3D-Printed Display Lets Blind People Explore Images By Touch

Blind and partially sighted people often use tactile displays to interact with computers.

Fbi Director Says Investigators ­nable to ­nlock San Bernardino Shooter's Phone Content
From ACM News

Fbi Director Says Investigators ­nable to ­nlock San Bernardino Shooter's Phone Content

FBI Director James Comey said on Tuesday that federal investigators have still been unable to access the contents of a cellphone belonging to one of the killers...

Your Next New Best Friend Might Be a Robot
From ACM Opinion

Your Next New Best Friend Might Be a Robot

One night in late July 2014, a journalist from the Chinese newspaper Southern Weeklyinterviewed a 17-year-old Chinese girl named Xiaoice (pronounced Shao-ice).

New Ways Into the Brain's 'music Room'
From ACM News

New Ways Into the Brain's 'music Room'

Whether to enliven a commute, relax in the evening or drown out the buzz of a neighbor's recreational drone, Americans listen to music nearly four hours a day.

An Icky New Hero: Roach-Like Robots May Help in Disasters
From ACM News

An Icky New Hero: Roach-Like Robots May Help in Disasters

When buildings collapse in future disasters, the hero helping rescue trapped people may be a robotic cockroach.

How the British and Americans Started Listening In
From ACM News

How the British and Americans Started Listening In

It was late on 8 February 1941 when four Americans arrived at Bletchley Park.

Gps and the World's First 'space War'
From ACM News

Gps and the World's First 'space War'

Twenty-five years ago U.S.-led Coalition forces launched the world’s first "space war" when they drove Iraqi troops out of Kuwait.

Google Deepmind AI Navigates a Doom-Like 3D Maze Just By Looking
From ACM News

Google Deepmind AI Navigates a Doom-Like 3D Maze Just By Looking

Google DeepMind just entered the 90s. Fresh off their success in playing the ancient game of Go, DeepMind’s latest artificial intelligence can navigate a 3D maze...

Better Brain Imaging Could Show Computers a Smarter Way to Learn
From ACM News

Better Brain Imaging Could Show Computers a Smarter Way to Learn

Machine learning is an extremely clever approach to computer programming.
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