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.


Intel Bets It Can Turn Everyday Silicon Into Quantum Computing's Wonder Material
From ACM News

Intel Bets It Can Turn Everyday Silicon Into Quantum Computing's Wonder Material

Sometimes the solution to a problem is staring you in the face all along.

The Long-Term Jobs Killer Is Not China. It's Automation.
From ACM News

The Long-Term Jobs Killer Is Not China. It's Automation.

The first job that Sherry Johnson, 56, lost to automation was at the local newspaper in Marietta, Ga., where she fed paper into the printing machines and laid out...

European Court of Justice Rules Against Mass Data Retention in Eu
From ACM News

European Court of Justice Rules Against Mass Data Retention in Eu

The Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ) ruled on Wednesday that laws allowing for the blanket collection and retention of location and traffic data are...

Building Jarvis
From ACM Opinion

Building Jarvis

My personal challenge for 2016 was to build a simple AI to run my home—like Jarvis in Iron Man.

Nvidia Surges in 2016 Using Graphics Chips to Challenge Intel
From ACM News

Nvidia Surges in 2016 Using Graphics Chips to Challenge Intel

When Paulina Sliwinska, a fund manager at Edinburgh-based Baillie Gifford & Co., made the trip to Silicon Valley looking for the next big thing in technology, she...

Grids of Defects Make Diamonds Practical For Quantum Computing
From ACM News

Grids of Defects Make Diamonds Practical For Quantum Computing

One of the more exciting things happening in physics at the moment is the development of quantum computers that may actually be able to do something useful. 

The Great A.i. Awakening
From ACM News

The Great A.i. Awakening

Late one Friday night in early November, Jun Rekimoto, a distinguished professor of human-computer interaction at the University of Tokyo, was online preparing...

Bias in Technology
From Communications of the ACM

Bias in Technology

As leading companies release troubling diversity statistics, experts search for solutions.

Database of Software 'fingerprints' Expands to Include Mobile Apps
From ACM TechNews

Database of Software 'fingerprints' Expands to Include Mobile Apps

U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology researchers have spent 15 years maintaining an archive of the world's software.

Where Is the Ice on Ceres? New Nasa Dawn Findings
From ACM News

Where Is the Ice on Ceres? New Nasa Dawn Findings

At first glance, Ceres, the largest body in the main asteroid belt, may not look icy.

The Man Behind the Internet
From ACM News

The Man Behind the Internet

A chat with worldwide pioneer Vinton Cerf.

Ephemeral Antimatter Atoms Pinned Down in Milestone Laser Test
From ACM News

Ephemeral Antimatter Atoms Pinned Down in Milestone Laser Test

In a technical tour-de-force, physicists have made the first measurements of how antimatter atoms absorb light.

Scientists Are Frantically Copying U.S. Climate Data, Fearing It Might Vanish Under Trump
From ACM Careers

Scientists Are Frantically Copying U.S. Climate Data, Fearing It Might Vanish Under Trump

Alarmed that decades of crucial climate measurements could vanish under a hostile Trump administration, scientists have begun a feverish attempt to copy reams of...

These ­niversities Are Training the World's Top Coders
From ACM TechNews

These ­niversities Are Training the World's Top Coders

The three best coders in the world come from the Russian ITMO University, China's Sun Yat-sen Memorial Middle School, and the Ho Chi Minh City University of Science...

Elevator Makers Think Outside the Box, and Even Sideways
From ACM News

Elevator Makers Think Outside the Box, and Even Sideways

ThyssenKrupp's new $43 million elevator test tower soars 246 meters (808 ft) above the German town of Rottweil, but the company's lifts chief is not only thinking...

Nasa Releases New Eye-Popping View of Carbon Dioxide
From ACM News

Nasa Releases New Eye-Popping View of Carbon Dioxide

A new NASA supercomputer project builds on the agency's satellite measurements of carbon dioxide and combines them with a sophisticated Earth system model to provide...

Tech Giants Open Virtual Worlds to Bevy of AI Programs
From ACM News

Tech Giants Open Virtual Worlds to Bevy of AI Programs

The Minecraft video game was familiar to José Hernández-Orallo long before he started using it for his own research.

Google's Improbable Deal to Recreate the Real World in Vr
From ACM News

Google's Improbable Deal to Recreate the Real World in Vr

Let a thousand virtual worlds rain down from the clouds. Or rather, the cloud.

Earth's Magnetic Fields Could Track Ocean Heat: Nasa
From ACM News

Earth's Magnetic Fields Could Track Ocean Heat: Nasa

As Earth warms, much of the extra heat is stored in the planet's ocean—but monitoring the magnitude of that heat content is a difficult task.

­.s. Proposes Requiring Vehicles to 'talk' to Each Other to Avoid Crashes
From ACM News

­.s. Proposes Requiring Vehicles to 'talk' to Each Other to Avoid Crashes

The U.S. Transportation Department on Tuesday proposed requiring all new cars and trucks to be able to "talk" to one another using short-range wireless technology...
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account