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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.


How Google Plans to Find the ­ngoogleable
From ACM News

How Google Plans to Find the ­ngoogleable


Risk of Robot ­prising Wiping Out Human Race to Be Studied
From ACM News

Risk of Robot ­prising Wiping Out Human Race to Be Studied

The Centre for the Study of Existential Risk will study dangers posed by biotechnology, artificial life, nanotechnology, and climate change.

Scientists See Promise in Deep-Learning Programs
From ACM TechNews

Scientists See Promise in Deep-Learning Programs

Deep-learning technology, an artificial intelligence technique inspired by theories about how the brain recognizes patterns, has grown in speed and accuracy. Deep...

X-37b: Secrets of the ­.s. Military Spaceplane
From ACM News

X-37b: Secrets of the ­.s. Military Spaceplane

In the early morning of 16 June, 2012, a top-secret spaceplane made a picture-perfect landing at the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

Brain-Like Chip Outstrips Normal Computers
From ACM News

Brain-Like Chip Outstrips Normal Computers

Computer chips that mimic the human brain are outstripping conventional chips in crucial ways. They could also revolutionise our understanding of how the brain...

Michio Kaku Sketches Technological Wonderland of the Future at Sc12
From ACM News

Michio Kaku Sketches Technological Wonderland of the Future at Sc12

Imagine a world where a computer chip costs just a penny.

Why the Frontiers of Biology Might Be Inside a Computer Chip
From ACM News

Why the Frontiers of Biology Might Be Inside a Computer Chip

When David Harel started the experiment, the petri dish of mouse cells looked just like any other.

From ACM News

Say Hello, or 你好, to China’s Siri

You might not have heard of iFlyTek. The company is hardly a household name in its domestic market of China, either.

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...

Almost Being There: Why the Future of Space Exploration Is Not What You Think
From ACM News

Almost Being There: Why the Future of Space Exploration Is Not What You Think

Mocup is a tiny, adorable remote-controlled robot built from a Lego Mindstorms set with an off-the-shelf Beagleboard computer for a brain and a webcam for an eye...

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...

The True State of Artificial Intelligence
From ACM TechNews

The True State of Artificial Intelligence

Monash University researcher Kevin Korb recently discussed what stage artificial intelligence research has reached.  

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...

High-Performance Computing Turns to Apps to Cut Cost and Frustration
From ACM TechNews

High-Performance Computing Turns to Apps to Cut Cost and Frustration

The concept of apps could enable more companies to take advantage of high-performance computing (HPC), considering the cost of HPC hardware and software makes adoption...

Measuring Metabolism Can Predict the Progress of Alzheimer's with 90 Percent Accuracy
From ACM TechNews

Measuring Metabolism Can Predict the Progress of Alzheimer's with 90 Percent Accuracy

Tel Aviv University researchers have developed a method for identifying early signs of Alzheimer's disease in the brain's metabolism.  

Silicon Valley Technology Could Be Key to Connect Cars For Safer Driving
From ACM News

Silicon Valley Technology Could Be Key to Connect Cars For Safer Driving

While Google's self-driving car is getting heaps of attention, a lesser-known effort that would employ Silicon Valley technologies to make regular automobiles safer...

Computers 'taught' to Id Regulating Gene Sequences
From ACM TechNews

Computers 'taught' to Id Regulating Gene Sequences

Johns Hopkins University researchers have developed a tool that can teach computers how to identify commonalities in DNA sequences known to regulate gene activity...

Google Explains How More Data Means Better Speech Recognition
From ACM News

Google Explains How More Data Means Better Speech Recognition

A new research paper out of Google describes in some detail the data science behind the the company's speech recognition applications, such as voice search and...

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.

Most U.s. Drones Openly Broadcast Secret Video Feeds
From ACM News

Most U.s. Drones Openly Broadcast Secret Video Feeds

Four years after discovering that militants were tapping into drone video feeds, the U.S. military still hasn't secured the transmissions of more than half of its...
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