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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.


Will Tech Firms Challenge China's 'open' Internet?
From ACM News

Will Tech Firms Challenge China's 'open' Internet?

Sometimes you can gauge how proud someone is about being at an event by the extent to which they want to talk about it.

Google Missed Out on China. Can It Flourish in India?
From ACM News

Google Missed Out on China. Can It Flourish in India?

Every month, about four million more Indians get online. They include people like Manju, a 35-year-old seamstress in this city of ancient palaces, who got her first...

Artificial Intelligence Predicts Outcomes of Chemical Reactions
From ACM News

Artificial Intelligence Predicts Outcomes of Chemical Reactions

By thinking of atoms as letters and molecules as words, artificial intelligence software from IBM is now employing the same methods computers use to translate languages...

How AI Will Invade Every Corner of Wall Street
From ACM News

How AI Will Invade Every Corner of Wall Street

It was AI versus Warren Buffett.

Future Wars May Depend as Much on Algorithms as on Ammunition, Report Says. 
From ACM News

Future Wars May Depend as Much on Algorithms as on Ammunition, Report Says. 

The Pentagon is increasingly focused on the notion that the might of U.S. forces will be measured as much by the advancement of their algorithms as by the ammunition...

Supercomputing Poised For a Massive Speed Boost
From ACM News

Supercomputing Poised For a Massive Speed Boost

At the end of July, workers at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee began filling up a cavernous room with the makings of a computational behemoth: row...

­ltrasound Could Offer Noninvasive Treatment For Parkinson's and Depression
From ACM News

­ltrasound Could Offer Noninvasive Treatment For Parkinson's and Depression

A macaque monkey sat in front of a computer. A yellow square—the target—appeared in the periphery on the left side of the screen. After a few seconds delay, a second...

Two New Simulators Tease Future of Quantum Computing
From ACM News

Two New Simulators Tease Future of Quantum Computing

A universal quantum computer capable of outperforming today's classical computers in solving many different problems remains the biggest future prize for many engineers...

4 Strange New Ways to Compute
From ACM News

4 Strange New Ways to Compute

With Moore's Law slowing, engineers have been taking a cold hard look at what will keep computing going when it's gone.

'alien' Dna Makes Proteins in Living Cells For the First Time
From ACM News

'alien' Dna Makes Proteins in Living Cells For the First Time

Life has spent the past few billion years working with a narrow vocabulary. Now researchers have broken those rules, adding extra letters to biology's limited lexicon...

Nasa Builds Its Next Mars Rover Mission
From ACM News

Nasa Builds Its Next Mars Rover Mission

In just a few years, NASA's next Mars rover mission will be flying to the Red Planet.

Can Police Track You Through Your Cellphone Without a Warrant?
From ACM News

Can Police Track You Through Your Cellphone Without a Warrant?

The U.S. Supreme Court confronts the digital age again on Wednesday when it hears oral arguments in a case that promises to have major repercussions for law enforcement...

How an ­nderwater Sensor Network Is Tracking Argentina's Lost Submarine
From ACM Opinion

How an ­nderwater Sensor Network Is Tracking Argentina's Lost Submarine

On 15 November, Argentina's Navy lost contact with the ARA San Juan, a small diesel-powered submarine that had been involved in exercises off the east coast of...

To Build the World's Smallest Atomic Clock, Trap a Nitrogen Atom in a Carbon Cage
From ACM News

To Build the World's Smallest Atomic Clock, Trap a Nitrogen Atom in a Carbon Cage

For Fridtjof Nansen, 13 April 1895 started well.

AI-Controlled Brain Implants For Mood Disorders Tested in People
From ACM News

AI-Controlled Brain Implants For Mood Disorders Tested in People

Brain implants that deliver electrical pulses tuned to a person's feelings and behaviour are being tested in people for the first time. Two teams funded by the...

How the Pentagon Is Preparing For the Coming Drone Wars
From ACM News

How the Pentagon Is Preparing For the Coming Drone Wars

More than a decade after the improvised explosive device became the scourge of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Pentagon is battling another relatively rudimentary...

How Traveling Back In Time Could Really, Physically Be Possible
From ACM News

How Traveling Back In Time Could Really, Physically Be Possible

It's one of the greatest tropes in movies, literature, and television shows: the idea that we could travel back in time to alter the past.

Nasa Links Port-City Sea Levels to Regional Ice Melt
From ACM News

Nasa Links Port-City Sea Levels to Regional Ice Melt

A new NASA tool links changes in sea level in 293 global port cities to specific regions of melting land ice, such as southern Greenland and the Antarctic Peninsula...

Recurring Martian Streaks: Flowing Sand, Not Water?
From ACM News

Recurring Martian Streaks: Flowing Sand, Not Water?

Dark features on Mars previously considered evidence for subsurface flowing of water are interpreted by new research as granular flows, where grains of sand and...

As Silicon Valley Gets 'crazy,' Midwest Beckons Tech Investors
From ACM Careers

As Silicon Valley Gets 'crazy,' Midwest Beckons Tech Investors

They seem an odd couple. J. D. Vance, author of "Hillbilly Elegy," his best-selling memoir of growing up in the postindustrial Midwest and his journey of escape...
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