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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.


­.s. Government Probes Medical Devices For Possible Cyber Flaws
From ACM News

­.s. Government Probes Medical Devices For Possible Cyber Flaws

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is investigating about two dozen cases of suspected cybersecurity flaws in medical devices and hospital equipment that...

Data Bank Struggles As Protein Imaging ­ps Its Game
From ACM News

Data Bank Struggles As Protein Imaging ­ps Its Game

Structural biology, the mapping of complex biological molecules such as proteins, is in the grip of a revolution.

­.s. National Security Prosecutors Shift Focus from Spies to Cyber
From ACM News

­.s. National Security Prosecutors Shift Focus from Spies to Cyber

The U.S. Justice Department is restructuring its national security prosecution team to deal with cyber attacks and the threat of sensitive technology ending up...

Galactic Wheel of Life Shines in Infrared
From ACM News

Galactic Wheel of Life Shines in Infrared

It might look like a spoked wheel or even a "Chakram" weapon wielded by warriors like "Xena," from the fictional TV show, but this ringed galaxy is actually a vast...

How the World Came to Be Run By Computer Code
From ACM News

How the World Came to Be Run By Computer Code

From the scythe to the steam engine, we've always used technology to control the world around us.

Superconducting Circuits, Simplified
From ACM TechNews

Superconducting Circuits, Simplified

Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers have developed a nanocryotron , a computing circuit based on the cryotron.

The Quiet Rise of the Satellite Spy Agency
From ACM News

The Quiet Rise of the Satellite Spy Agency

As far as intelligence agencies go, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency has remained relatively low profile—attracting neither the intrigue of, say, the...

All Three NASA Mars Orbiters Healthy After Comet Flyby
From ACM News

All Three NASA Mars Orbiters Healthy After Comet Flyby

All three NASA orbiters around Mars confirmed their healthy status Sunday after each took shelter behind Mars during a period of risk from dust released by a passing...

To Siri, With Love
From ACM Opinion

To Siri, With Love

Just how bad a mother am I? I wondered, as I watched my 13-year-old son deep in conversation with Siri.

Miss a Payment? Good Luck Moving That Car
From ACM News

Miss a Payment? Good Luck Moving That Car

The thermometer showed a 103.5-degree fever, and her 10-year-old's asthma was flaring up. Mary Bolender, who lives in Las Vegas, needed to get her daughter to an...

Computing with Magnetic 'Tornadoes'
From ACM TechNews

Computing with Magnetic 'Tornadoes'

A new technology could dramatically reduce the power consumption of computers. 

Ebola: Can Big Data Analytics Help Contain Its Spread?
From ACM News

Ebola: Can Big Data Analytics Help Contain Its Spread?

The Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa has now claimed more than 4,000 lives.

Fbi Director Warns Against Cellphone Encryption
From ACM News

Fbi Director Warns Against Cellphone Encryption

FBI Director James Comey warned in stark terms Thursday against the push by technology companies to encrypt smartphone data and operating systems, arguing that...

ESA Confirms the Primary Landing Site for Rosetta
From ACM News

ESA Confirms the Primary Landing Site for Rosetta

ESA has given the green light for its Rosetta mission to deliver its lander, Philae, to the primary site on 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko on 12 November, in the first...

Australian Teams Set New Records for Silicon Quantum Computing
From ACM TechNews

Australian Teams Set New Records for Silicon Quantum Computing

University of New South Wales researchers say they have developed two types of quantum bits that each process data with an accuracy of greater than 99 percent.

Rosetta Mission Selfie at 16 Km
From ACM News

Rosetta Mission Selfie at 16 Km

Using the CIVA camera on Rosetta’s Philae lander, the spacecraft have snapped a "selfie" at comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko from a distance of about 16 km from...

How to Make a Black Hole
From ACM News

How to Make a Black Hole

On July 2, 1967, a network of satellites designed to detect tests of nuclear weapons recorded a flash of gamma rays coming from the wrong direction—outer space.

Nasa Mission Provides Its First Look at Martian Upper Atmosphere
From ACM News

Nasa Mission Provides Its First Look at Martian Upper Atmosphere

NASA's Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) spacecraft has provided scientists their first look at a storm of energetic solar particles at Mars, produced...

Nasa Prepares its Science Fleet For Oct. 19 Mars Comet Encounter
From ACM News

Nasa Prepares its Science Fleet For Oct. 19 Mars Comet Encounter

NASA's extensive fleet of science assets, particularly those orbiting and roving Mars, have front row seats to image and study a once-in-a-lifetime comet flyby...

How Jean Tirole's Work Helps Explain the Internet Economy
From ACM News

How Jean Tirole's Work Helps Explain the Internet Economy

For anyone who has wondered how it’s possible to get so much stuff from web companies free or at too-good-to-be-true prices—whether Google searching, Facebook socializing...
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