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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.


The Path to a Wearable Future Lies in Academia
From ACM TechNews

The Path to a Wearable Future Lies in Academia

Many of the innovative products now available to consumers are based on technologies developed in academic laboratories years ago. 

A Mouse That Beats the Gamers at Super-Quick Motions
From ACM TechNews

A Mouse That Beats the Gamers at Super-Quick Motions

A new computer mouse looks and responds like a conventional mouse but offers nearly unlimited tracking speed. 

The Trouble with Reference Rot
From ACM News

The Trouble with Reference Rot

The scholarly literature is meant to be a permanent record of science.

The Number Glitch That Can Lead to Catastrophe
From ACM News

The Number Glitch That Can Lead to Catastrophe

A surprisingly simple bug afflicts computers controlling planes, spacecraft and more; they get confused by big numbers.

The Crazy-Tiny Next Generation of Computers
From ACM News

The Crazy-Tiny Next Generation of Computers

When Prabal Dutta accidentally drops a computer, nothing breaks.

The Billion-Dollar Race to Reinvent the Computer Chip
From ACM TechNews

The Billion-Dollar Race to Reinvent the Computer Chip

Chipmakers are spending billions of dollars to develop new computing architectures as the ability to build more transistors into a chip approaches its physical...

With Boxing Match, Video Piracy Battle Enters Latest Round: Mobile Apps
From ACM News

With Boxing Match, Video Piracy Battle Enters Latest Round: Mobile Apps

The method used by thousands of people to watch unauthorized broadcasts of Saturday night's big boxing match might have been new, but to longtime media executives...

To Invent the Future, You Must ­nderstand the Past
From ACM News

To Invent the Future, You Must ­nderstand the Past

"You can't really understand what is going on now without understanding what came before."

What Would You See in a Black Hole?
From ACM News

What Would You See in a Black Hole?

Something about a black hole just pulls you in. Sure, its gravity is so strong that not even light can elude its grasp. But, there's something else, something harder...

At the Heart of Facebook's Artificial Intelligence, Human Emotions
From ACM Careers

At the Heart of Facebook's Artificial Intelligence, Human Emotions

Facebook Inc. doesn't yet have an intelligent assistant, like the iPhone's Siri.

"fingerprinting" Chips to Fight Counterfeiting
From ACM TechNews

"fingerprinting" Chips to Fight Counterfeiting

Researchers are using microscopic variations to "fingerprint" silicon chips used in consumer-product tags to combat product counterfeiting. 

Rehab Robot Harmony Introduced By ­t Austin Engineers
From ACM TechNews

Rehab Robot Harmony Introduced By ­t Austin Engineers

University of Texas at Austin researchers have developed a two-armed robotic rehabilitation exoskeleton. 

NASA Aids Response to Nepal Quake
From ACM News

NASA Aids Response to Nepal Quake

NASA and its partners are gathering the best available science and information on the April 25, 2015, magnitude 7.8 earthquake in Nepal, referred to as the Gorkha...

Joseph Lechleider, a Father of the Dsl Internet Technology, Dies at 82
From ACM News

Joseph Lechleider, a Father of the Dsl Internet Technology, Dies at 82

In the late 1980s, Joseph W. Lechleider came up with a clever solution to a puzzling technical problem, making it possible to bring high-speed Internet service...

Ancient Dna Tells a New Human Story
From ACM News

Ancient Dna Tells a New Human Story

Imagine what it must have been like to look through the first telescopes or the first microscopes, or to see the bottom of the sea as clearly as if the water were...

Robots May Look Like Job-Killers, But It's Hard to See in the Numbers
From ACM News

Robots May Look Like Job-Killers, But It's Hard to See in the Numbers

Robots are goosing the productivity of the world's factories, but does that mean fewer jobs for humans?

Messenger's Final Image
From ACM News

Messenger's Final Image

Originally planned to orbit Mercury for one year, the mission exceeded all expectations, lasting for over four years and acquiring extensive datasets with its seven...

Deep Learning Machine Solves the Cocktail Party Problem
From ACM News

Deep Learning Machine Solves the Cocktail Party Problem

The cocktail party effect is the ability to focus on a specific human voice while filtering out other voices or background noise.

Future 'top Guns' Will Be Battle Managers Flying Bigger, Slower Aircraft
From ACM News

Future 'top Guns' Will Be Battle Managers Flying Bigger, Slower Aircraft

At the dawn of aerial combat 100 years ago, World War I flying aces frequently closed to within 15 meters before firing at enemy aircraft with their machine guns...

Brace Yourself: Microsoft Wants to Guess How Old You Are
From ACM News

Brace Yourself: Microsoft Wants to Guess How Old You Are

Like a distant relative who makes you feel bad at the annual holiday get together, Microsoft has created a website that analyzes a photo of a person's face and...
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