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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.


2013 Visualization Challenge
From ACM News

2013 Visualization Challenge

With a Ph.D. in neuroscience and a love of Asian art, it may have been inevitable that Greg Dunn would combine them to create sparse, striking illustrations of...

New 'Mask' APT Campaign Called Most Sophisticated
From ACM News

New 'Mask' APT Campaign Called Most Sophisticated

A group of high-level, nation-state attackers has been targeting government agencies, embassies, diplomatic offices and energy companies with a cyber-espionage...

Snowden ­sed Low-Cost Tool to Best NSA
From ACM TechNews

Snowden ­sed Low-Cost Tool to Best NSA

Edward Snowden used inexpensive and widely available software to "scrape" the U.S. National Security Agency's (NSA) networks, according to intelligence officials...

Can a Statistical Model Accurately Predict Olympic Medal Counts?
From ACM News

Can a Statistical Model Accurately Predict Olympic Medal Counts?

If someone asked you to predict the number of medals each country is going to win in this year's Olympics, you'd probably try to identify the favored athletes in...

The Robots That Saved Pittsburgh
From ACM News

The Robots That Saved Pittsburgh

It's hard to pinpoint the moment Pittsburgh began its three-decade climb back from the dead, but Red Whittaker marks the comeback from the instant he heard the...

This Iphone-Size Device Can Hack A Car, Researchers Plan To Demonstrate
From ACM News

This Iphone-Size Device Can Hack A Car, Researchers Plan To Demonstrate

Auto makers have long downplayed the threat of hacker attacks on their cars and trucks, arguing that their vehicles' increasingly networked systems are protected...

NASA's Troubled $8-Billion Hubble Successor Is Back on Track
From ACM News

NASA's Troubled $8-Billion Hubble Successor Is Back on Track

The Hubble Space Telescope is still operating, but its successor is already waiting in the wings.

When Will Genomics Cure Cancer?
From ACM Opinion

When Will Genomics Cure Cancer?

Since the beginning of this century, the most rapidly advancing field in the life sciences, and perhaps in human inquiry of any sort, has been genomics.

IBM and PARC to Design Sensitive Electronics for Military that Shatter to Dust on Command
From ACM News

IBM and PARC to Design Sensitive Electronics for Military that Shatter to Dust on Command

Two U.S. companies are joining a military research program to develop sensitive electronic components able to self-destruct on command to keep them out of the hands...

A Robotic Hand, This Time with Feeling
From ACM News

A Robotic Hand, This Time with Feeling

A Dutch man who lost his left hand in a fireworks accident nine years ago is now able to feel different kinds of pressure on three fingers of a prosthetic, robotic...

New Surveillance Technology Can Track Everyone in an Area for Several Hours at a Time
From ACM News

New Surveillance Technology Can Track Everyone in an Area for Several Hours at a Time

Shooter and victim were just a pair of pixels, dark specks on a gray streetscape. 

Perfecting the Art of Sensible Nonsense
From ACM News

Perfecting the Art of Sensible Nonsense

As a graduate student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1996, Amit Sahai was fascinated by the strange notion of a "zero-knowledge" proof, a type...

Fda Approves Pill Camera to Screen Colon
From ACM News

Fda Approves Pill Camera to Screen Colon

A kinder, gentler approach to one of the most dreaded exams in medicine is on the way: U.S. regulators have cleared a bite-size camera to help screen patients who...

Attempting to Code the Human Brain
From ACM News

Attempting to Code the Human Brain

Somewhere, in a glass building several miles outside of San Francisco, a computer is imagining what a cow looks like.

Mind Meld: The Genius of Swarm Thinking
From ACM News

Mind Meld: The Genius of Swarm Thinking

Iain Couzin does not have fond memories of field research.

Government Wants You to Broadcast Your Driving Data—Eventually
From ACM News

Government Wants You to Broadcast Your Driving Data—Eventually

The U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has announced that it's finally ready to consider regulations that...

From ACM News

Evidence Emerges That Google's Quantum Computer May Not Be Quantum After All

Back in 2011, the aerospace giant Lockheed Martin paid a cool $10 million for the world's first commercial quantum computer from a Canadian start up called D-Wave...

When No One Is Just a Face in the Crowd
From ACM News

When No One Is Just a Face in the Crowd

Hey, big spenders.

California Threatens Code Boot Camps With the Boot
From ACM TechNews

California Threatens Code Boot Camps With the Boot

California educational regulators reportedly are pressuring several coding boot camps for operating as unlicensed postsecondary educational institutions. 

Scientists Reading Fewer Papers For First Time in 35 Years
From ACM News

Scientists Reading Fewer Papers For First Time in 35 Years

A 35-year trend of researchers reading ever more scholarly papers seems to have halted.
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