acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

News


bg-corner

An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


Bluebrain: Noah Hutton's 10-Year Documentary About the Mission to Reverse Engineer the Human Brain
From ACM Opinion

Bluebrain: Noah Hutton's 10-Year Documentary About the Mission to Reverse Engineer the Human Brain

"Nothing quite like it exists yet, but we have begun building it," Henry Markram wrote in the June 2012 issue of Scientific American. He was referring to a "fantastic...

Will We Ever ­nderstand How Our Brains Work?
From ACM News

Will We Ever ­nderstand How Our Brains Work?

When it comes to the human brain, many scientists believe that we are incapable of understanding how it works because we lack the tools and intelligence to measure...

Agency Programs Show Outlines of Future Cyber Ecosystem
From ACM TechNews

Agency Programs Show Outlines of Future Cyber Ecosystem

Although the creation of autonomous, self-defending, and self-healing online ecosystems remains years away, several U.S. government programs are already laying...

Registration Open For 20th Annual Nasa Great Moonbuggy Race
From ACM Careers

Registration Open For 20th Annual Nasa Great Moonbuggy Race

Registration is open for the 20th annual NASA Great Moonbuggy Race, which challenges high school, college, and university students around the world to build and...

Supercomputing For a Superproblem: A Computational Journey Into Pure Mathematics
From ACM TechNews

Supercomputing For a Superproblem: A Computational Journey Into Pure Mathematics

Mathematician Yuri Matiyasevich is focusing on finding a solution to the challenging mathematical problem of the Riemann Zeta Function hypothesis.

Everyone Wants a Slice of Raspberry Pi
From ACM News

Everyone Wants a Slice of Raspberry Pi

It's 9am on a lovely autumn morning at Cern, the European Organisation for Nuclear Research, just outside Geneva.

Bonfire of the Cables
From ACM TechNews

Bonfire of the Cables

University of Oxford researchers have developed technology that enables devices such as mobile phones to charge and transmit data without cables and could eventually...

Quantum Entanglement Shows that Reality Can't Be Local
From ACM News

Quantum Entanglement Shows that Reality Can't Be Local

Quantum entanglement stands as one of the strangest and hardest concepts to understand in physics.

Ping-Pong Robot Learns to Play Like a Person
From ACM News

Ping-Pong Robot Learns to Play Like a Person

A robot that learns to play ping-pong from humans and improves as it competes against them could be the best robotic table-tennis challenger the world has seen.

Why Is This Supercomputer So Superfast?
From ACM News

Why Is This Supercomputer So Superfast?

The world's fastest supercomputers have come back to the U.S. In June, the title was claimed by a machine named Sequoia at Lawrence Livermore Labs. Monday, at the...

Nasa's Spitzer Sees Light of Lonesome Stars
From ACM News

Nasa's Spitzer Sees Light of Lonesome Stars

A new study using data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope suggests a cause for the mysterious glow of infrared light seen across the entire sky.

Quantum Computing With Recycled Particles
From ACM TechNews

Quantum Computing With Recycled Particles

A new demonstration by researchers at the University of Bristol shows how it is possible to recycle the particles inside a quantum computer, so that quantum factoring...

Software on Mars
From Communications of the ACM

Software on Mars

With the AEGIS system, the Mars Exploration Rovers can autonomously select, capture, and analyze images using onboard logic.

Microsoft's Plan to Bring About the Era of Gesture Control
From ACM News

Microsoft's Plan to Bring About the Era of Gesture Control

While most of the headlines about Microsoft this fall will concern its new operating system, Windows 8, and its new Surface tablet, the company is also working...

Another Advance on the Road to Spintronics
From ACM TechNews

Another Advance on the Road to Spintronics

Researchers say spintronic technology could be used to make dilute magnetic semiconductors by adding a small amount of magnetic atoms to normal semiconductors,...

First Micro-Structure Atlas of the Human Brain Completed
From ACM TechNews

First Micro-Structure Atlas of the Human Brain Completed

European researchers working on the CONNECT project recently created the first atlas of white-matter microstructures in the human brain.  

One Step Closer to a Brain
From ACM News

One Step Closer to a Brain

A few months ago Google shared with us another challenge it had taken on. It wasn't as fanciful as a driverless car or as geekily sexy as augmented reality glasses...

A Complex Logic Circuit Made From Bacterial Genes
From ACM TechNews

A Complex Logic Circuit Made From Bacterial Genes

Washington University in St. Louis professor Tae Seok Moon hopes to develop biological circuits made from genes and regulatory proteins.  

Graphene Could ­sher in Flexible, ­ltra-Slim Gadgets
From ACM News

Graphene Could ­sher in Flexible, ­ltra-Slim Gadgets

You've probably never heard of graphene, a carbon-based material, but it might be stuffed into your pocket or wrapped around your wrist in the not-too-distant future...

'Invisibility' Could Be a Key to Better Electronics
From ACM TechNews

'Invisibility' Could Be a Key to Better Electronics

MIT researchers have applied the concept of harnessing cloaking mechanisms developed to conceal objects from view to the movement of electrons, which could lead...
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account