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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.


Stanford's Video Processing in the Cloud Allows Interactive Streaming of Online Lectures
From ACM TechNews

Stanford's Video Processing in the Cloud Allows Interactive Streaming of Online Lectures

Stanford University researchers recently released the program code for ClassX, software that converts static videos of class lectures into interactive online video...

From ACM News

Post-9/11 Security: A Rational Student Debate

The 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks is approaching, and you can count on the flow of remembrances and where-are-we-now updates swelling...

Italian Hi-Tech Software Teaches Perfect Pasta Skills
From ACM TechNews

Italian Hi-Tech Software Teaches Perfect Pasta Skills

University of Bologna researchers have developed Tortellino X-perience, a multimedia teaching game that combines a traditional video with a three-dimensional representation...

ACM Award Recipients
From Communications of the ACM

ACM Award Recipients

Craig Gentry, Kurt Mehlhorn, and other computer scientists are honored for their research and service.

Brave, New Social World
From Communications of the ACM

Brave, New Social World

How three different individuals in three different countries — Brazil, Egypt, and Japan — use Facebook, Twitter, and other social-media tools.

What Big Media Can Learn From the New York Public Library
From ACM News

What Big Media Can Learn From the New York Public Library

Despite looming budget cuts, the library is flourishing and putting out some of the most innovative online projects in the country.

Computer Studies Made Cool, on Film and Now on Campus
From ACM News

Computer Studies Made Cool, on Film and Now on Campus

When Keila Fong arrived at Yale, she had never given much thought to computer science. But then last year everyone on campus started talking about the film "The...

The First Computer Musician
From ACM News

The First Computer Musician

In 1957 a 30-year-old engineer named Max Mathews got an I.B.M. 704 mainframe computer at the Bell Telephone Laboratories in Murray Hill, NJ, to generate 17 seconds...

From ACM News

Why There's No Nobel Prize in Computing

When Nobel Prizes are dished out each fall, the most accomplished professionals in computing, telecom, and IT have usually been left out in the cold. That's...

Brain Calisthenics For Abstract Ideas
From ACM News

Brain Calisthenics For Abstract Ideas

Like any other high school junior, Wynn Haimer has a few holes in his academic game. Graphs and equations, for instance: He gets the idea, fine—one is a linear...

The Defenders: Inside an Online Siege
From ACM News

The Defenders: Inside an Online Siege

In a quiet, windowless auditorium in Bristol, in the west of England, Lucy Robson and her team hunch over their laptops as the seconds on a giant clock above...

Making the Case For Security
From ACM News

Making the Case For Security

Major corporations have made serious mistakes with information security recently, resulting in spectacular failures to protect business and customer records....

The Next Great Resource Shortage: U.S. Scientists
From ACM News

The Next Great Resource Shortage: U.S. Scientists

The word "stem" is tossed around so much at education meetings these days, you'd think you were at a gardening seminar. STEM is shorthand for "science, technology...

The Rise of a New Science Superpower?
From ACM News

The Rise of a New Science Superpower?

Since the turn of the 21st century, the number scientific papers published predominantly by Chinese researchers in any of the Nature journals has risen from six...

Robot Wars Prepare Kids For Manufacturing Jobs
From ACM News

Robot Wars Prepare Kids For Manufacturing Jobs

Robot battles have drawn kids into novels, TV shows, and movies for decades. Now companies are using robot wars to attract a new generation of employees to high...

From ACM News

Funny Science Sparks Serious Spat

U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., issued a 73-page report, "The National Science Foundation: Under the Microscope," after months of signals from GOP leaders that the...

All the News That's Fit For You
From Communications of the ACM

All the News That's Fit For You

Personalized news promises to make daily journalism profitable again, but technical and cultural obstacles have slowed the industry's adoption of automated personalization...

The Promise of Flexible Displays
From Communications of the ACM

The Promise of Flexible Displays

New screen materials could lead to portable devices that are anything but rectangular, flat, and unbendable.

Biology-Inspired Networking
From Communications of the ACM

Biology-Inspired Networking

Researchers have developed a new networking algorithm, modeled after the neurological development of the fruit fly, to help distributed networks self-organize more...

Tracking the Flow of Knowledge
From ACM News

Tracking the Flow of Knowledge

Do scientists' job locations have any impact on the way their work spreads? Or, in today’s highly networked world, does research flow around the globe without...
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