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.


Gene Editing For 'designer Babies'? Highly ­nlikely, Scientists Say
From ACM News

Gene Editing For 'designer Babies'? Highly ­nlikely, Scientists Say

Now that science is a big step closer to being able to fiddle with the genes of a human embryo, is it time to panic?

Stanford Bioengineers Encourage Virtual Competitors to Vie For a Different Kind of Athletic Title
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Bioengineers Encourage Virtual Competitors to Vie For a Different Kind of Athletic Title

Researchers have built precise models of how individual muscles and limbs move in response to neural control signals, and organized a contest to develop models...

Pitt Researchers Control Supercomputers in Space
From ACM TechNews

Pitt Researchers Control Supercomputers in Space

Researchers are conducting high-performance computing operations in space.

Artificial Intelligence Helps to Keep Tired Drivers Awake
From ACM TechNews

Artificial Intelligence Helps to Keep Tired Drivers Awake

Researchers at Panasonic have developed an artificial intelligence platform to keep tired drivers comfortably alert at all times.

Cosmic Map Reveals a Not-So-Lumpy ­niverse
From ACM News

Cosmic Map Reveals a Not-So-Lumpy ­niverse

Cosmologists have produced the biggest map yet of the Universe's structure and they find it less lumpy than previous surveys have suggested.

Clarifying Complex Chemical Processes With Quantum Computers
From ACM TechNews

Clarifying Complex Chemical Processes With Quantum Computers

Researchers at ETH Zurich in Switzerland say they have demonstrated a concrete example of a future application for quantum computers.

The Future Takes Flight at Du
From ACM TechNews

The Future Takes Flight at Du

Researchers at the University of Denver's Unmanned Systems Research Institute are attempting to improve unmanned aerial vehicle technology.

Sneaky Attacks Trick Ais Into Seeing or Hearing What's Not There
From ACM TechNews

Sneaky Attacks Trick Ais Into Seeing or Hearing What's Not There

A new technique could be used by hackers to trick autonomous cars into ignoring stop signs or prevent surveillance cameras from spotting a suspect.

An App For the Perfect Selfie
From ACM TechNews

An App For the Perfect Selfie

Researchers at the University of Waterloo in Canada say they have developed a smartphone application to help people learn how to take better selfies.

Ever-Elusive Neutrinos Spotted Bouncing Off Nuclei For the First Time
From ACM News

Ever-Elusive Neutrinos Spotted Bouncing Off Nuclei For the First Time

Neutrinos are famously antisocial. Of all the characters in the particle physics cast, they are the most reluctant to interact with other particles.

The Race to Reveal Antimatter's Secrets
From ACM News

The Race to Reveal Antimatter's Secrets

In a high-ceilinged hangar at CERN, six rival experiments are racing to understand the nature of one of the Universe's most elusive materials.

Five Years Ago and 154 Million Miles Away: Touchdown!
From ACM News

Five Years Ago and 154 Million Miles Away: Touchdown!

NASA's Curiosity Mars rover, which landed near Mount Sharp five years ago this week, is examining clues on that mountain about long-ago lakes on Mars.

Are the World's Highest Paid Football Players Overpaid? Big Data Says Yes
From ACM TechNews

Are the World's Highest Paid Football Players Overpaid? Big Data Says Yes

Researchers have used machine learning and data science to analyze the salaries of 6,082 professional European football (soccer) players.

Wsu Physicists Write With Light, Turn Crystal Into an Electrical Circuit
From ACM TechNews

Wsu Physicists Write With Light, Turn Crystal Into an Electrical Circuit

Researchers at Washington State University have developed a method for writing an electrical circuit into a crystal.

Teaching Robots Right From Wrong
From ACM News

Teaching Robots Right From Wrong

Artificial intelligence is outperforming the human sort in a growing range of fields—but how do we make sure it behaves morally?

Chip Technology Could Help the Blind, Robots, See
From ACM News

Chip Technology Could Help the Blind, Robots, See

Bio-inspired designs that encode light as time are ushering in systems as efficient as human neurology.

Storing Data in Dna Brings Nature Into the Digital ­niverse
From ACM TechNews

Storing Data in Dna Brings Nature Into the Digital ­niverse

Researchers at the University of Washington currently hold the record for the amount of information stored in and retrieved from DNA molecules.

Crispr Fixes Disease Gene in Viable Human Embryos
From ACM News

Crispr Fixes Disease Gene in Viable Human Embryos

An international team of researchers has used CRISPR–Cas9 gene editing—a technique that allows scientists to make precise changes to genomes with relative ease—to...

Two Voyagers Taught ­S How to Listen to Space
From ACM News

Two Voyagers Taught ­S How to Listen to Space

As NASA's twin Voyager spacecraft were changing our understanding of the solar system, they also spurred a leap in spacecraft communications.

How Neural Networks Are Transforming the World of Translation
From ACM TechNews

How Neural Networks Are Transforming the World of Translation

Imperial College London professor Erol Gelenbe says artificial neural networks can ease language translation by executing a three-step process.
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account