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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.


Rashid, Tevanian to Receive ACM 2014 Software System Award
From ACM News

Rashid, Tevanian to Receive ACM 2014 Software System Award

Microsoft's Rashid and former Apple executive Tevanian were selected for their roles as lead developers of a pioneering operating system.

Computing After Moore's Law
From ACM News

Computing After Moore's Law

The technologies chip makers hope can keep Moore's Law alive.

3 Questions on Killer Robots
From ACM Opinion

3 Questions on Killer Robots

Delegates to the United Nations Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons are meeting this week in Geneva to discuss fully autonomous weapons—machines that could...

Fighting the Next Generation of Cyberattacks
From ACM TechNews

Fighting the Next Generation of Cyberattacks

Researchers recently received a $3-million U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency grant to develop software that can identify a new kind of vulnerability...

Proto Quantum Computer Inspired By Victorians Gets a Speed Boost
From ACM News

Proto Quantum Computer Inspired By Victorians Gets a Speed Boost

Quantum computers should theoretically outpace ordinary ones, but attempts to build a speedy quantum machine have so far come up short. Now an approach based on...

Nasa's New Horizons Nears Historic Encounter with Pluto
From ACM News

Nasa's New Horizons Nears Historic Encounter with Pluto

NASA's New Horizons spacecraft is three months from returning to humanity the first-ever close up images and scientific observations of distant Pluto and its system...

As Encryption Spreads, U.s. Grapples with Clash Between Privacy, Security
From ACM News

As Encryption Spreads, U.s. Grapples with Clash Between Privacy, Security

For months, federal law enforcement agencies and industry have been deadlocked on a highly contentious issue: Should tech companies be obliged to guarantee government...

Europe Faces 800,000 Shortfall in Skilled Ict Workers By 2020
From ACM TechNews

Europe Faces 800,000 Shortfall in Skilled Ict Workers By 2020

A shortfall in workers with information and communication technology skills could keep Europe from enjoying the benefits of big data and cloud computing. 

Top 10 Hubble Images
From ACM Opinion

Top 10 Hubble Images

As the famous telescope turns 25, scientists who worked on the project choose their favourite pictures. 

Inside the Multibillion-Dollar Quest to Make Faster, Cheaper Gadgets
From ACM Careers

Inside the Multibillion-Dollar Quest to Make Faster, Cheaper Gadgets

Mark Bohr peers through the yellow-tinted windows outside D1D, one of Intel's secretive computer chip factories housed at its 300-acre campus here, about a 30-minute...

Moore's Law Hits 50, but It May Not See 60
From ACM Opinion

Moore's Law Hits 50, but It May Not See 60

Moore's Law turns 50 years old this Sunday. It may not make it to 60.

Rule Rewrite Aims to Clean Up Scientific Software
From ACM News

Rule Rewrite Aims to Clean Up Scientific Software

The finding seemed counterintuitive: warming in North America was driving plant species to lower elevations—not towards higher, cooler climes, as ecologists had...

Happy Birthday to Moore's Law
From ACM News

Happy Birthday to Moore's Law

Few revolutions can be said to have lasted for half a century, or to have wrought disruptive change at a predictable pace.

Survey Shows Most Female Software Developers in 15 Years
From ACM TechNews

Survey Shows Most Female Software Developers in 15 Years

The number of female software developers has doubled since Evans Data first examined the group in 2001, according to Evans Data's Developer Marketing 2015 survey...

The Printed Organs Coming to a Body Near You
From ACM News

The Printed Organs Coming to a Body Near You

The advent of three-dimensional (3D) printing has generated a swell of interest in artificial organs meant to replace, or even enhance, human machinery.

Robots Go Deep Inside Fukushima Nuclear Plant to Map Radiation
From ACM News

Robots Go Deep Inside Fukushima Nuclear Plant to Map Radiation

In the dark abandoned shell of Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, Rosemary and Sakura shoot what looks like a dystopian first-person shooter game.

Why Zapping the Brain Helps Parkinson's Patients
From ACM News

Why Zapping the Brain Helps Parkinson's Patients

Sending pulses of electricity through the brain via implanted electrodes—a procedure known as deep brain stimulation—can relieve the symptoms of Parkinson's and...

Case Against Google May Be ­ndercut By Rapid Shifts in Tech
From ACM Opinion

Case Against Google May Be ­ndercut By Rapid Shifts in Tech

The antitrust case against Google filed by European Union regulators on Wednesday will inevitably draw comparisons to the long-running prosecution of Microsoft,...

Hackers Could Commandeer New Planes Through Passenger Wi-Fi
From ACM News

Hackers Could Commandeer New Planes Through Passenger Wi-Fi

Seven years after the Federal Aviation Administration first warned Boeing that its new Dreamliner aircraft had a Wi-Fi design that made it vulnerable to hacking...

Google Has Patented the Ability to Control a Robot Army
From ACM News

Google Has Patented the Ability to Control a Robot Army

After getting a patent for giving robots personalities last month, Google now wants to unleash an army of Rodney Dangerfield bots on the world.
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