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.


From ACM News

Mind-Goggling

If you think the art of mind-reading is a conjuring trick, think again. Over the past few years, the ability to connect first monkeys and then men to machines...

Robots Are Taking Mid-Level Jobs, Changing the Economy
From ACM TechNews

Robots Are Taking Mid-Level Jobs, Changing the Economy

The eventual replacement of humans by robots and computers in enough jobs will eventually transform the economic landscape, and this process has already begun,...

Catching a Wave, and Measuring It
From ACM News

Catching a Wave, and Measuring It

James Gosling wants to network the world’s oceans.

Ibm's Watson Edges Harvard Students in 'jeopardy!' Quiz
From ACM TechNews

Ibm's Watson Edges Harvard Students in 'jeopardy!' Quiz

IBM's Watson supercomputer recently defeated teams of students from Harvard Business School and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School of Management...

From ACM News

Headless, Humanoid Robot Preps For Army Duty

Sauntering toward you like a mechanized zombie is the Army’s newest recruit: a robot with a blinking red light where its head should be.

From ACM News

IBM Simulates 4.5% of the Human Brain, and All of the Cat Brain

Supercomputers can store more information than the human brain and can calculate a single equation faster, but even the biggest, fastest supercomputers in the world...

AI Pioneer John Mccarthy, 1927-2011
From ACM News

AI Pioneer John Mccarthy, 1927-2011

Artificial intelligence pioneer and Lisp creator John McCarthy, who received the A.M. Turing Award in 1971, passed away on October 23. He was 84.

John McCarthy
From ACM News

John McCarthy

When IBM's Deep Blue supercomputer won its famous chess rematch with then world champion Garry Kasparov in May 1997, the victory was hailed far and wide as a...

Robotic Venus Flytrap Snags Prey
From ACM News

Robotic Venus Flytrap Snags Prey

Carnivorous plants have long fascinated humans with their blood-sucking capabilities. The Venus flytrap is even smart enough to pause before snapping shut, ensuring...

Why Computer Voices Are Mostly Female
From ACM News

Why Computer Voices Are Mostly Female

To most owners of the new iPhone, the voice-activated feature called Siri is more than a virtual "assistant" who can help schedule appointments, find a good nearby...

Modeling Chaotic Storms
From Communications of the ACM

Modeling Chaotic Storms

Scientists say improvements to extreme-weather prediction are possible with new weather models and a reinvention of the modeling technologies used to process them...

Precision-Controlled Microbots Show They Could Take On Industrial-Scale Jobs
From ACM News

Precision-Controlled Microbots Show They Could Take On Industrial-Scale Jobs

A pioneering research institute that introduced the computer world to the mouse, hypertext, and networks is now setting its sights a bit lower.

How Google's Self-Driving Car Works
From ACM News

How Google's Self-Driving Car Works

Once a secret project, Google's autonomous vehicles are now out in the open, quite literally, with the company test-driving them on public roads and, on one occasion...

Stanford Engineering's New Online Classes: Hugely Popular and Bursting With Activity
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Engineering's New Online Classes: Hugely Popular and Bursting With Activity

About 300,000 students have registered for Stanford University's first set of comprehensive, free online computer science courses, which include courses in databases...

PingPong-Playing Robots Debut
From ACM News

PingPong-Playing Robots Debut

Robots are already taking away jobs at factories. Now, it appears, they're ready to rule the table tennis court, too. Two pingpong-playing humanoid robots named...

From ACM News

Control a Wheelchair By Biting and Blinking

Imagine: You're paralyzed from the neck down, a full-on quadriplegic with what doctors refer to as a "high level spinal cord injury." How do you get around?

From ACM News

Robot Wars 'Still a Long Way Off'

"I'll be back" said Arnold Schwarzenegger as cyborg-assassin the Terminator, back from the year 2029 to carry out a murder in 1984. But it seems that, when it...

Robot Car to Cut Jams & Crashes
From ACM TechNews

Robot Car to Cut Jams & Crashes

Oxford University researchers have installed robotic technology in a Wildcat vehicle built by BAE Systems that transforms the vehicle into an autonomous car. The...

Instant Health Checks For Buildings and Bridges
From ACM News

Instant Health Checks For Buildings and Bridges

During 2011's deadly onslaught of earthquakes, floods and tornadoes, countless buildings had to be evacuated while workers checked to make sure they were stable...

From ACM Opinion

The Singularity Isn't Near

 Futurists like Vernor Vinge and Ray Kurzweil have argued that the world is rapidly approaching a tipping point, where the accelerating pace of smarter and smarter...
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account