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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.


Moore's Law Isn't Making Chips Cheaper Anymore
From ACM Opinion

Moore's Law Isn't Making Chips Cheaper Anymore

At a wine bar in San Francisco on Wednesday, Broadcom Chairman and CTO Henry Samueli delivered some sobering news: Moore's Law isn't making chips cheaper anymore...

An Artificial Hand with Real Feelings
From ACM News

An Artificial Hand with Real Feelings

There have been remarkable mechanical advances in prosthetic limbs in recent years, including rewiring nerve fibers to control sophisticated mechanical arms (see...

3-D Images, With Only One Photon Per Pixel
From ACM News

3-D Images, With Only One Photon Per Pixel

Lidar rangefinders, which are common tools in surveying and in autonomous-vehicle control, among other applications, gauge depth by emitting short bursts of laser...

Google Puts Money on Robots, ­sing the Man Behind Android
From ACM Opinion

Google Puts Money on Robots, ­sing the Man Behind Android

In an out-of-the-way Google office, two life-size humanoid robots hang suspended in a corner.

What Can Happen When Graphene Meets a Semiconductor
From ACM TechNews

What Can Happen When Graphene Meets a Semiconductor

Researchers say they have identified new characteristics of electron transport in a two-dimensional sheet of graphene layered on top of a semiconductor. 

Europa's Choppy Ocean Looks Friendly to Life
From ACM News

Europa's Choppy Ocean Looks Friendly to Life

As moons go, Europa is doing pretty well in the looks department.

Nasa Outlines Ingenious Plan to Resurrect the Kepler Planet Hunter
From ACM News

Nasa Outlines Ingenious Plan to Resurrect the Kepler Planet Hunter

Back in August, NASA formally threw in the towel on attempts to get its Kepler planet-hunting probe working again.

Willis Ware, Who Helped Build Blueprint For Computer Design, Dies at 93
From ACM News

Willis Ware, Who Helped Build Blueprint For Computer Design, Dies at 93

Willis H. Ware, an electrical engineer who played an important role in defining the importance of personal privacy in the information age, has died at age 93.

Scientists Seek Other Scientists For Cosmology Problem
From ACM News

Scientists Seek Other Scientists For Cosmology Problem

How do you measure something that is invisible?

Already Anticipating 'terminator' Ethics
From ACM News

Already Anticipating 'terminator' Ethics

What could possibly go wrong?

Three Questions For Computing Pioneer Carver Mead
From ACM Opinion

Three Questions For Computing Pioneer Carver Mead

Computer scientist Carver Mead gave Moore's Law its name in around 1970 and played a crucial role in making sure it's held true in the decades since.

From ACM News

Why the ­.s. May Lose the Race to Exascale

In the global race to build the next generation of supercomputers—exascale—there is no guarantee the U.S. will finish first.

Graphene: The Quest For Supercarbon
From ACM News

Graphene: The Quest For Supercarbon

Mr G gazes out from a recruitment poster hanging in an engineering building in Cambridge, U.K.

Milestone Could Help Magnets End Era of Computer Transistors
From ACM TechNews

Milestone Could Help Magnets End Era of Computer Transistors

Magnetic switches could one day replace conventional transistors at the core of modern electronics.

Chaotic Physics in Ferroelectrics Hints at Brain-Like Computing
From ACM TechNews

Chaotic Physics in Ferroelectrics Hints at Brain-Like Computing

Researchers have found unexpected behavior in ferroelectric materials, supporting a new approach to information storage and processing. 

The Good Judgment Project
From ACM News

The Good Judgment Project

A team of researchers tries to determine the best approach to predicting world events by making a game out of it.

The Brain's Crowdsourcing Software
From ACM TechNews

The Brain's Crowdsourcing Software

Neuroscientists are discovering how groups of cells in the human brain cooperate to produce certain results, in a manner similar to crowdsourcing software. 

Nasa Probe May Help Solve Riddle of Mars's Missing Air
From ACM News

Nasa Probe May Help Solve Riddle of Mars's Missing Air

NASA's next mission to Mars aims to answer one question: What happened to the air that once made the surface habitable?

A Neuroscientist's Radical Theory of How Networks Become Conscious
From ACM Opinion

A Neuroscientist's Radical Theory of How Networks Become Conscious

It's a question that’s perplexed philosophers for centuries and scientists for decades: Where does consciousness come from?

Remembering Legendary Enigma Code Breaker Mavis Batey
From ACM News

Remembering Legendary Enigma Code Breaker Mavis Batey

Cracking one of the most complicated cipher devices ever created—the Enigma machine—may not have been what Britain's Mavis Batey envisioned when she studied the...
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