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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.


Where in the Solar System Are We Most Likely to Find Life?
From ACM News

Where in the Solar System Are We Most Likely to Find Life?

Last week, NASA announced one of its most exciting missions in recent memory: a plan to visit Europa, one of Jupiter's largest moons.

The Search For Aliens Is Just Getting Started
From ACM Opinion

The Search For Aliens Is Just Getting Started

Over the past 50 years, several SETI projects have scoured the cosmos but have yet to turn up anything conclusive. What do you make of this cosmic radio-silence...

Robot Project Aims to Help Doctors Diagnose Human Stroke Victims
From ACM TechNews

Robot Project Aims to Help Doctors Diagnose Human Stroke Victims

Researchers are developing spring-loaded muscles for the Roboy robot. 

Soft Robotic Fish Moves Like the Real Thing
From ACM News

Soft Robotic Fish Moves Like the Real Thing

Soft robots—which don’t just have soft exteriors but are also powered by fluid flowing through flexible channels—have become a sufficiently popular research topic...

Nasa's Wise Survey Finds Thousands of New Stars, But No 'planet X'
From ACM News

Nasa's Wise Survey Finds Thousands of New Stars, But No 'planet X'

After searching hundreds of millions of objects across our sky, NASA's Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) has turned up no evidence of the hypothesized...

Nanomaterial May Be Future of Hard Drives
From ACM News

Nanomaterial May Be Future of Hard Drives

Most magnets shrug off tiny temperature tweaks.

Stanford's Folding@home Simulates Activation of Key Cancer Protein, Could Lead to Novel Drug Design
From ACM TechNews

Stanford's Folding@home Simulates Activation of Key Cancer Protein, Could Lead to Novel Drug Design

Stanford's Folding@home project has simulated Src Kinase, which plays an important role in many cancers. 

Seeking Quantum-Ness: D-Wave Chip Passes Rigorous Tests
From ACM TechNews

Seeking Quantum-Ness: D-Wave Chip Passes Rigorous Tests

Researchers have shown the D-Wave One processor behaves in a way that agrees with a model called quantum Monte Carlo, yet disagrees with two candidate classical...

Hot on the Trail of Consciousness in Brain and Machine
From ACM News

Hot on the Trail of Consciousness in Brain and Machine

"Nowhere in science have so many devoted so much to create so little consensus," writes physicist, author, and TV presenter Michio Kaku of consciousness research...

Computer Science: The Learning Machines
From ACM News

Computer Science: The Learning Machines

Three years ago, researchers at the secretive Google X lab in Mountain View, California, extracted some 10 million still images from YouTube videos and fed them...

Virtual Reality Startups Look Back to the Future
From ACM Careers

Virtual Reality Startups Look Back to the Future

It's been almost 30 years since the computer scientist Jaron Lanier formed VPL Research, the first company to sell the high-tech goggles and gloves that once defined...

Perjurers and Fake Reviews Train Software to Spot Lies
From ACM News

Perjurers and Fake Reviews Train Software to Spot Lies

Lawyers and judges use skill and instinct to sense who might be lying in court.

Radboud Professor Invents Magnet For Fast and Cheap Data Storage
From ACM TechNews

Radboud Professor Invents Magnet For Fast and Cheap Data Storage

Optical data storage does not require expensive magnetic materials and works just as well as synthetic alternatives, say researchers. 

Cassini Nears 100th Titan Flyby with a Look Back
From ACM News

Cassini Nears 100th Titan Flyby with a Look Back

Ten years ago, we knew Titan as a fuzzy orange ball about the size of Mercury.

Interviewing the Algorithm
From ACM News

Interviewing the Algorithm

Often, when there's talk about algorithms and journalism, the focus is on how to use algorithms to help publishers share content better and make more money.

Europa Mission Gets Boost from President's New Nasa Budget
From ACM News

Europa Mission Gets Boost from President's New Nasa Budget

A dedicated mission to Jupiter's icy moon Europa, one of the best bets for life beyond Earth in our solar system, has inched a little closer to reality today.

Remembering Mit, When There Were Just 50 Women in a Class of 1,000
From ACM Opinion

Remembering Mit, When There Were Just 50 Women in a Class of 1,000

When Radia Perlman attended MIT in the late '60s and '70s, she was one of just a few dozen women (about 50) out of a class of 1,000.

How Do You Build a Large-Scale Quantum Computer?
From ACM TechNews

How Do You Build a Large-Scale Quantum Computer?

Researchers have proposed a modular architecture that offers scalability to address the challenge of physically implementing a full-scale universal quantum computer...

Disney Research Soccer Formations Analysis Suggests Home Advantage Is Result of Execution
From ACM TechNews

Disney Research Soccer Formations Analysis Suggests Home Advantage Is Result of Execution

An automated analysis of soccer team formations shows visiting teams are less successful than home teams only because they play conservatively. 

Rise of the Human Exoskeletons
From ACM News

Rise of the Human Exoskeletons

On the outskirts of Pisa in a back room of a modern block, a machine is waiting for its operator.
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