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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.


Nasa-Noaa's Suomi Npp Satellite Sees Record-Breaking Hurricane Patricia
From ACM News

Nasa-Noaa's Suomi Npp Satellite Sees Record-Breaking Hurricane Patricia

On October 23, a Hurricane Warning was in effect from San Blas to Punta San Telmo.

Nsa Advisory Sparks Concern of Secret Advance ­shering in Cryptoapocalypse
From ACM News

Nsa Advisory Sparks Concern of Secret Advance ­shering in Cryptoapocalypse

In August, National Security Agency officials advised US agencies and businesses to prepare for a not-too-distant time when the cryptography protecting virtually...

Sorry, Einstein. Quantum Study Suggests 'spooky Action' Is Real.
From ACM News

Sorry, Einstein. Quantum Study Suggests 'spooky Action' Is Real.

In a landmark study, scientists at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands reported they have conducted an experiment they say proves one of the most...

Paralyzed Man's Arm Wired to Receive Brain Signals
From ACM News

Paralyzed Man's Arm Wired to Receive Brain Signals

Scientists at Case Western Reserve University in Ohio say they’ve used electronics to get around a paralyzed man's spinal injury, permitting him to use an implant...

Nih-Built Toolset Helps Researchers Share and Compare Data
From ACM TechNews

Nih-Built Toolset Helps Researchers Share and Compare Data

What started as an effort to build a database on traumatic brain injury at the U.S. National Institutes of Health has grown into something more significant.

How Iceland Is Reeling in its Newest Catch: Global Data Centers
From ACM News

How Iceland Is Reeling in its Newest Catch: Global Data Centers

Think "electricity," green and cheap; no chilling required.

Nasa's K2 Finds Dead Star Vaporizing a Mini 'planet'
From ACM News

Nasa's K2 Finds Dead Star Vaporizing a Mini 'planet'

Scientists using NASA's repurposed Kepler space telescope, known as the K2 mission, have uncovered strong evidence of a tiny, rocky object being torn apart as it...

Car Infotainment Systems Distract Even with Voice Commands
From ACM News

Car Infotainment Systems Distract Even with Voice Commands

Car infotainment systems that use voice commands may let drivers keep their hands on the wheel, but they're still highly distracting.

Why Self-Driving Cars Must Be Programmed to Kill
From ACM News

Why Self-Driving Cars Must Be Programmed to Kill

When it comes to automotive technology, self-driving cars are all the rage.

You Wouldn't Think It, But Typeface Piracy Is a Big Problem
From ACM News

You Wouldn't Think It, But Typeface Piracy Is a Big Problem

It's safe to assume that most people have no idea that fonts, like music or movies, are protected by intellectual property laws, they usually come with a hefty...

Search For Intelligent Aliens Near Bizarre Dimming Star Has Begun
From ACM News

Search For Intelligent Aliens Near Bizarre Dimming Star Has Begun

The search for signs of life in a mysterious star system hypothesized to potentially harbor an "alien megastructure" is now underway.

Museum Specimens Find New Life Online
From ACM News

Museum Specimens Find New Life Online

In a brightly lit room on the third floor of the Museum of Natural History here, stacks of wooden drawers are covered in glass, some panes so dusty that it is difficult...

X-Ray Scans Expose an Ingenious Chip-and-Pin Card Hack
From ACM News

X-Ray Scans Expose an Ingenious Chip-and-Pin Card Hack

The chip-enabled credit card system long used in Europe, a watered down version of which is rolling out for the first time in America, is meant to create a double...

After 10 Years, Google Books Is Legal
From ACM News

After 10 Years, Google Books Is Legal

On Friday, a federal circuit court made clear that Google Books is legal.

Most Americans Would Be Fine with Some Internet Surveillance If They Were Notified
From ACM News

Most Americans Would Be Fine with Some Internet Surveillance If They Were Notified

Despite increasingly heated rhetoric from opponents of government surveillance, a recent survey shows that most Americans would be okay with many kinds of Internet...

Apple Ceo Defends Encryption, Opposes Government Back Door
From ACM News

Apple Ceo Defends Encryption, Opposes Government Back Door

Apple Inc.'s Chief Executive Officer and the director of the National Security Agency squared off on Monday in a debate over how much access technology companies...

A Robot Finds Its Way ­sing Artificial 'gps' Brain Cells
From ACM News

A Robot Finds Its Way ­sing Artificial 'gps' Brain Cells

The behavior and interplay of two types of neurons in the brain helps give humans and other animals an uncanny ability to navigate by building a mental map of their...

Seeing Stars, Again: Naval Academy Reinstates Celestial Navigation
From ACM Careers

Seeing Stars, Again: Naval Academy Reinstates Celestial Navigation

The same techniques guided ancient Polynesians in the open Pacific and led Sir Ernest Shackleton to remote Antarctica, then oriented astronauts when the Apollo...

The Most Mysterious Star in Our Galaxy
From ACM News

The Most Mysterious Star in Our Galaxy

In the Northern hemisphere's sky, hovering above the Milky Way, there are two constellations—Cygnus the swan, her wings outstretched in full flight, and Lyra, the...

Vast Cosmic Voids Merge Like Soap Bubbles
From ACM News

Vast Cosmic Voids Merge Like Soap Bubbles

Vast regions of near-empty space in the Universe are growing and shrinking, much as bubbles merge and separate in soapsuds, astronomers have discovered.
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