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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.


Injectable Implants Could Help Crack the Brain's Codes
From ACM News

Injectable Implants Could Help Crack the Brain's Codes

Understanding how the brain works—or doesn't, as the case may be—depends on deciphering the patterns of electrical signals its neurons produce.

Inside an MIT Researcher's Grand Plan to Create the Personal Food Computer
From ACM TechNews

Inside an MIT Researcher's Grand Plan to Create the Personal Food Computer

The CityFarm research group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Media Lab seeks to expand the emerging field of vertical farming. 

Researchers Create Transparent, Stretchable Conductors ­sing Nano-Accordion Structure
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Create Transparent, Stretchable Conductors ­sing Nano-Accordion Structure

North Carolina State University  researchers have created stretchable, transparent conductors using a nano-accordion design. 

Ancient American Genome Rekindles Legal Row
From ACM News

Ancient American Genome Rekindles Legal Row

The genome of a famous 8,500-year-old North American skeleton, known as Kennewick Man, shows that he is closely related to Native American tribes that have for...

Eight Spacecraft that Have Been Rescued, Resurrected, and Repurposed
From ACM News

Eight Spacecraft that Have Been Rescued, Resurrected, and Repurposed

Earlier this week, the Rosetta spacecraft's Philae lander finally woke up after a seven-month snooze.

Beware the Listening Machines
From ACM Opinion

Beware the Listening Machines

One of my great pleasures in life is attending conferences on fields I'm intrigued by, but know nothing about.

A Kaist Research Team Develops the First Flexible Phase-Change Random Access Memory
From ACM TechNews

A Kaist Research Team Develops the First Flexible Phase-Change Random Access Memory

Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) researchers say they have developed the first flexible phase change random access memory. 

Revealed: The Secret Gear Connecting Google's Online Empire
From ACM News

Revealed: The Secret Gear Connecting Google's Online Empire

Three-and-a-half years ago, a strange computing device appeared at an office building in the tiny farmland town of Shelby, Iowa.

Samsung, LG Smartwatches Give ­p Personal Data to Researchers
From ACM TechNews

Samsung, LG Smartwatches Give ­p Personal Data to Researchers

Researchers have shown they can extract personal information from two smartwatches because none of the data is encrypted. 

Dissolving Titan
From ACM News

Dissolving Titan

Saturn's moon Titan is home to seas and lakes filled with liquid hydrocarbons, but what makes the depressions they lie in? A new study suggests that the moon’s...

U.s. 'export Rules' Threaten Research
From ACM Careers

U.s. 'export Rules' Threaten Research

The U.S. government is considering policy changes that could dramatically affect how researchers handle equipment and information that have national-security implications...

Who Will Own the Robots?
From ACM News

Who Will Own the Robots?

The way Hod Lipson describes his Creative Machines Lab captures his ambitions: "We are interested in robots that create and are creative."  

Consumer Groups Back Out of Federal Talks on Face Recognition
From ACM News

Consumer Groups Back Out of Federal Talks on Face Recognition

A central component of President Obama's effort to give consumers more control over how companies collect and share their most sensitive personal details has run...

Saturn Spacecraft to Buzz Icy Moon Dione June 16
From ACM News

Saturn Spacecraft to Buzz Icy Moon Dione June 16

NASA's Cassini spacecraft will make a close flyby of Saturn's moon Dione on June 16, coming within 321 miles (516 kilometers) of the moon's surface.

Centimeter-Long Origami Robot
From ACM TechNews

Centimeter-Long Origami Robot

At the recent International Conference on Robotics and Automation, researchers  presented a printable robot than can fold itself up from a flat sheet of plastic...

Philae Wake-Up Triggers Intense Planning
From ACM News

Philae Wake-Up Triggers Intense Planning

The receipt of signals from Rosetta's Philae lander on 13 June after 211 days of hibernation marked the start of intense activity. In coordination with its mission...

How Facebook Is Eating the $140 Billion Hardware Market
From ACM Careers

How Facebook Is Eating the $140 Billion Hardware Market

It started out as a controversial idea inside Facebook. In four short years, it has turned the $141 billion data-center computer-hardware industry on its head.

When Does a Hack Become an Act of War?
From ACM News

When Does a Hack Become an Act of War?

A tremendous number of personnel records—including some quite personal records—have likely been stolen by computer hackers.

Newly Discovered Property Could Help Beat the Heat Problem in Computer Chips
From ACM TechNews

Newly Discovered Property Could Help Beat the Heat Problem in Computer Chips

Researchers observed an exotic property that could alter the electronic structure of a material to reduce heat buildup and improve performance in computer components...

Robotic Harvesting of Broccoli Could Be Coming to a Field Near You
From ACM TechNews

Robotic Harvesting of Broccoli Could Be Coming to a Field Near You

A project involving three-dimensional camera technology at the University of Lincoln could result in a fully automatic robotic harvesting system for broccoli. 
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