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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 Attention Machine
From ACM News

The Attention Machine

Human attention isn't stable, ever, and it costs us: lives lost when drivers space out, billions of dollars wasted on inefficient work, and mental disorders that...

Human Traffickers Caught on Hidden Internet
From ACM News

Human Traffickers Caught on Hidden Internet

In November 2012 a 28-year-old woman plunged 15 meters from a bedroom window to the pavement in New York City, a devastating fall that left her body broken but...

Look Into My Eyes: Tracking Your Gaze Could Be the Next Big Gaming Input
From ACM News

Look Into My Eyes: Tracking Your Gaze Could Be the Next Big Gaming Input

The bulk of the press release announcing a March 10 release for the PC port of Assassin's Creed Rogue is strictly boilerplate.

Engineering Students Make History With Firefighting Humanoid Robot
From ACM TechNews

Engineering Students Make History With Firefighting Humanoid Robot

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University students and the U.S. Navy recently unveiled a fire-fighting humanoid robot.

Senator: Your Futuristic Car Is Putting Your Privacy and Security At Risk
From ACM News

Senator: Your Futuristic Car Is Putting Your Privacy and Security At Risk

Cars these days have more in common with smart phones than the Model-T. But a new reportfrom Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) warns that the increasing technical complexity...

Autonomous Vehicles: No Drivers Required
From ACM News

Autonomous Vehicles: No Drivers Required

This summer, people will cruise through the streets of Greenwich, U.K., in electric shuttles with no one's hands on the steering wheel—or any steering wheel at...

NASA's Curiosity Analyzing Sample of Martian Mountain
From ACM News

NASA's Curiosity Analyzing Sample of Martian Mountain

The second bite of a Martian mountain taken by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover hints at long-ago effects of water that was more acidic than any evidenced in the rover's...

Networks Reveal the Connections of Disease
From ACM News

Networks Reveal the Connections of Disease

Stefan Thurner is a physicist, not a biologist. But not long ago, the Austrian national health insurance clearinghouse asked Thurner and his colleagues at the Medical...

Don't Call Them 'utility' Rules: The Fcc's Net Neutrality Regime, Explained
From ACM News

Don't Call Them 'utility' Rules: The Fcc's Net Neutrality Regime, Explained

Within a few weeks we’ll have a huge document full of legalese on the Federal Communications Commission’s net neutrality rules, to replace the near-200-page ...

Could a Robot Have Written This Story? The Rise of the Robo-Journalist
From ACM News

Could a Robot Have Written This Story? The Rise of the Robo-Journalist

At large news agencies where speed is crucial, template-style stories have long been used for company results, allowing journalists to simply key in the relevant...

Quantum Computing Without Qubits
From ACM Opinion

Quantum Computing Without Qubits

For more than 20 years, Ivan H. Deutsch has struggled to design the guts of a working quantum computer.

The Computer that Crunches Cloud Data to Heat Your Home
From ACM News

The Computer that Crunches Cloud Data to Heat Your Home

Each photo we "like", email we send, and search we run creates heat.

Programming Safety Into Self-Driving Cars
From ACM TechNews

Programming Safety Into Self-Driving Cars

University of Massachusetts, Amherst professor Shlomo Zilberstein has been investigating ways of helping semi-autonomous systems to better make decisions. 

Lost Chunk of Pioneering EDSAC Computer Found
From ACM TechNews

Lost Chunk of Pioneering EDSAC Computer Found

An original part of one of the United Kingdom's pioneering computers has been donated to a project that is working to rebuild the machine. 

Team Led By UCLA and Columbia Engineers Uses Disorder to Control Light on a Nanoscale
From ACM TechNews

Team Led By UCLA and Columbia Engineers Uses Disorder to Control Light on a Nanoscale

Researchers have made a discovery that could lead to the more precise transfer of information in computer chips. 

Comet Scientists Abandon Philae Flyby
From ACM News

Comet Scientists Abandon Philae Flyby

The European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft will not make a dedicated flyby to search for the lost comet lander Philae any time soon, according to a post on...

Graphene's Cousin Silicene Makes Transistor Debut
From ACM News

Graphene's Cousin Silicene Makes Transistor Debut

Seven years ago, silicene was little more than a theorist's dream.

British Army Creates Team of Facebook Warriors
From ACM News

British Army Creates Team of Facebook Warriors

The British army is creating a special force of Facebook warriors, skilled in psychological operations and use of social media to engage in unconventional warfare...

Google Brain's Co-Inventor Tells Why He's Building Chinese Neural Networks
From ACM Opinion

Google Brain's Co-Inventor Tells Why He's Building Chinese Neural Networks

To chat with Andrew Ng I almost have to tackle him.

Researchers Determine How the Brain Controls Robotic Grasping Tools
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Determine How the Brain Controls Robotic Grasping Tools

University of Missouri researchers suggest the cerebellum may play a critical role in controlling assistive robots for the disabled. 
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