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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.


China's Leaders Are Softening Their Stance on AI
From ACM News

China's Leaders Are Softening Their Stance on AI

China might be at loggerheads with the United States over trade, but it is calling for a friendlier approach to the development of artificial intelligence.

60 Years of DARPA's Favorite Toys
From ACM News

60 Years of DARPA's Favorite Toys

This year, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) turned 60. To celebrate, DARPA held a conference in Washington, D.C. One of the highlights...

Mobile Websites Can Tap Into Your Phone's Sensors Without Asking
From ACM News

Mobile Websites Can Tap Into Your Phone's Sensors Without Asking

When apps want to access data from your smartphone's motion or light sensors, they often make that capability clear.

Smartphone, M.D.
From ACM TechNews

Smartphone, M.D.

Researchers have developed an application and laboratory kit that enable smartphones to identify bacteria from patients within 60 minutes.

Is a New Russian Meddling Tactic Hiding in Plain Sight?
From ACM Careers

Is a New Russian Meddling Tactic Hiding in Plain Sight?

To an untrained eye, USAReally might look like any other fledgling news organization vying for attention in a crowded media landscape.

How Apple Makes the AI Chip Powering the iPhone's Fancy Tricks
From ACM News

How Apple Makes the AI Chip Powering the iPhone's Fancy Tricks

A few years ago—the company won't say exactly when—some engineers at Apple began to think the iPhone's camera could be made smarter using newly powerful machine...

Engineers Add Sense of Touch to Prosthetic Hand
From ACM TechNews

Engineers Add Sense of Touch to Prosthetic Hand

Johns Hopkins University researchers have engineered an "electronic skin" that can incorporate a sense of touch into a prosthetic hand.

Electric Grid Protection Through Low-Cost Sensors, Machine Learning
From ACM TechNews

Electric Grid Protection Through Low-Cost Sensors, Machine Learning

Scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have developed a cost-effective method for detecting power-grid attacks on the fly.

Do You Know Cobol? If So, There Might Be a Job for You
From ACM TechNews

Do You Know Cobol? If So, There Might Be a Job for You

The Common Business-Oriented Language (Cobol) remains the most prevalent programming language in the financial services industry worldwide.

Opportunity Emerges in a Dusty Picture
From ACM News

Opportunity Emerges in a Dusty Picture

NASA still hasn't heard from the Opportunity rover, but at least we can see it again.

The Dangers of Automating Social Programs
From Communications of the ACM

The Dangers of Automating Social Programs

Is it possible to keep bias out of a social program driven by one or more algorithms?

A New Way to Capture the Brain's Electrical Symphony
From ACM News

A New Way to Capture the Brain's Electrical Symphony

Biophysicist Adam Cohen was strolling around San Francisco, California, in 2010, when a telephone call caught him by surprise. "We have a signal," said the caller...

Brown Researchers Teach Computers to See Optical Illusions
From ACM TechNews

Brown Researchers Teach Computers to See Optical Illusions

Brown University researchers have developed a neural network model that can be deceived by optical illusions.

The ­S Push to Boost 'Quantum Computing'
From ACM News

The ­S Push to Boost 'Quantum Computing'

A race by U.S. tech companies to build a new generation of powerful "quantum computers" could get a $1.3 billion boost from Congress, fueled in part by lawmakers' fear...

Machine Learning System Tackles Speech and Object Recognition, All at Once
From ACM TechNews

Machine Learning System Tackles Speech and Object Recognition, All at Once

A new system can learn to identify objects within an image, based on a spoken description of the image.

Two Japanese Robots Are Now Happily Hopping on an Asteroid
From ACM News

Two Japanese Robots Are Now Happily Hopping on an Asteroid

More than 24 hours after they were released by the Hayabusa2 spacecraft to fly down to the surface of the asteroid Ryugu, the Japanese Space Agency has finally...

Scientists ID Three Causes of Earth's Spin Axis Drift
From ACM News

Scientists ID Three Causes of Earth's Spin Axis Drift

A typical desk globe is designed to be a geometric sphere and to rotate smoothly when you spin it. Our actual planet is far less perfect—in both shape and in rotation...

Creating 3D-Printed 'Motion Sculptures' From 2D Videos
From ACM TechNews

Creating 3D-Printed 'Motion Sculptures' From 2D Videos

A new algorithm can take two-dimensional videos and turn them into three-dimensionally-printed "motion sculptures" that show how a human body moves through space...

Mathematicians Calculate the Safest Way Home
From ACM TechNews

Mathematicians Calculate the Safest Way Home

Researchers in the U.K. have developed a mobile app that guides pedestrians along the safest, rather than the quickest, route to their destination.

Pepper-Picking Robot Demonstrates Its Skills in Greenhouse Labor Automation
From ACM TechNews

Pepper-Picking Robot Demonstrates Its Skills in Greenhouse Labor Automation

A team of European Union-funded researchers have developed a sweet pepper-harvesting robot that can help farmers reduce their costs.
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