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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.


Germanwings Flight 9525, Technology, and the Question of Trust
From ACM Opinion

Germanwings Flight 9525, Technology, and the Question of Trust

Shortly before the dreadful crash of Germanwings Flight 9525, I happened to be reading part of "The Second Machine Age," a book by two academics at M.I.T., Erik...

2,636 Icelandic Genomes Pinpoint Risk For Alzheimer's, Other Diseases
From ACM News

2,636 Icelandic Genomes Pinpoint Risk For Alzheimer's, Other Diseases

An Icelandic genetics firm has sequenced the genomes of 2,636 of its countrymen and women, finding genetic markers for a variety of diseases, as well as a new timeline...

Rover Amnesia Event Follows Latest Memory Reformatting
From ACM News

Rover Amnesia Event Follows Latest Memory Reformatting

The team operating NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity learned Thursday that the long-lived rover experienced a brief amnesia event related to its flash memory...

Researchers Demonstrate Quantum Entanglement, Prove Einstein Wrong
From ACM News

Researchers Demonstrate Quantum Entanglement, Prove Einstein Wrong

For the first time, quantum entanglement of a single particle has been observed by researchers—an event that Albert Einstein believed to be impossible under the...

Learning to See Data
From ACM Opinion

Learning to See Data

For the past year or so genetic scientists at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York have been collaborating with a specialist from another universe...

Nvidia's Powerful New Computer Helps Teach Cars to Drive
From ACM News

Nvidia's Powerful New Computer Helps Teach Cars to Drive

As cars get smarter and creep ever-closer to driving themselves, the software that makes infotainment systems and adaptive cruise control work is becoming as important...

Astronomers ­pgrade Their Cosmic Light Bulbs
From ACM News

Astronomers ­pgrade Their Cosmic Light Bulbs

The brilliant explosions of dead stars have been used for years to illuminate the far-flung reaches of our cosmos.

Why Organism Engineering Could Be a Foodie's Dream Come True
From ACM Careers

Why Organism Engineering Could Be a Foodie's Dream Come True

Thanks to recent advances in synthetic biology—a hybrid discipline of engineering and biology that makes possible the manipulation of DNA of microorganisms such...

Augmented Reality Gets to Work—and Gets Past the 'glassholes'
From ACM News

Augmented Reality Gets to Work—and Gets Past the 'glassholes'

Augmented reality (AR) is a technology that has been on the cusp of becoming the next big thing for over 20 years.

Why Kevin Mitnick, the World's Most Notorious Hacker, Is Still Breaking Into Computers
From ACM Careers

Why Kevin Mitnick, the World's Most Notorious Hacker, Is Still Breaking Into Computers

Look no further than Kevin Mitnick's business card to see how some things never change.

Cooperative Software Framework Helps Tame 'too Big' Data
From ACM TechNews

Cooperative Software Framework Helps Tame 'too Big' Data

Researchers have used a multilayer software framework for querying graph databases to customize distributed-memory high-performance computing clusters.

One Thousand Genes You Could Live Without
From ACM News

One Thousand Genes You Could Live Without

Researchers have unveiled the largest ever set of full genomes from a single population: Iceland.

Machine Consciousness: Big Data Analytics and the Internet of Things
From ACM News

Machine Consciousness: Big Data Analytics and the Internet of Things

During my visit to General Electric's Global Research Centers in San Ramon, California, and Niskayuna, New York, last month, I got what amounts to an end-to-end...

Curiosity Rover Finds Biologically ­seful Nitrogen on Mars
From ACM News

Curiosity Rover Finds Biologically ­seful Nitrogen on Mars

A team using the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument suite aboard NASA's Curiosity rover has made the first detection of nitrogen on the surface of Mars from...

Five Medieval Alternatives to Sat Nav
From ACM News

Five Medieval Alternatives to Sat Nav

During the Middle Ages, the Vikings set sail in longships to raid faraway settlements and plunder their riches, but how did they find their way?

Extreme Cryptography Paves Way to Personalized Medicine
From ACM News

Extreme Cryptography Paves Way to Personalized Medicine

The dream for tomorrow's medicine is to understand the links between DNA and disease—and to tailor therapies accordingly.

How Crashing Drones Are Exposing Secrets About ­.s. War Operations
From ACM News

How Crashing Drones Are Exposing Secrets About ­.s. War Operations

Crashing drones are spilling secrets about U.S. military operations.

Rewriting the Rules of Turing's Imitation Game
From ACM News

Rewriting the Rules of Turing's Imitation Game

We have self-driving cars, knowledgeable digital assistants, and software capable of putting names to faces as well as any expert.

Stonebraker Receives 2014 ACM A.m. Turing Award
From ACM News

Stonebraker Receives 2014 ACM A.m. Turing Award

MIT’s Stonebraker brought relational database systems from concept to commercial success.

The Waves of the Future May Bend Around Metamaterials
From ACM News

The Waves of the Future May Bend Around Metamaterials

Plastics. Computers. Metamaterials?
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