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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.


Coding For Brain Chips Gives Cognitive Computing Boost
From ACM News

Coding For Brain Chips Gives Cognitive Computing Boost

It's a cognitive leap forward. IBM can now program an experimental chip they unveiled two years ago.

Nsa to Cut System Administrators By 90 Percent to Limit Data Access
From ACM News

Nsa to Cut System Administrators By 90 Percent to Limit Data Access

The U.S. National Security Agency, hit by disclosures of classified data by former contractor Edward Snowden, said Thursday it intends to eliminate about 90 percent...

Integrating Left Brain and Right, on a Computer
From ACM News

Integrating Left Brain and Right, on a Computer

As computers have matured over time, the human brain has no way of keeping up with silicon's rapid-fire calculating abilities.

Moore's Law Could Stay On Track with Extreme ­v Progress
From ACM News

Moore's Law Could Stay On Track with Extreme ­v Progress

Long-awaited improvements in photolithography could pave the way for the continued shrinking and scaling of microprocessors into the second half of this decade...

From ACM News

N.s.a. Said to Search Content of Messages to and From U.s.

The National Security Agency is searching the contents of vast amounts of Americans' email and text communications into and out of the country, hunting for people...

Former Nsa Chief on Latest Leaked Dragnet Spy Program: It's Real, and It's Spectacular
From ACM Opinion

Former Nsa Chief on Latest Leaked Dragnet Spy Program: It's Real, and It's Spectacular

Does the NSA really operate a vast database that allows its analysts to sift through millions of records showing nearly everything a user does on the Internet,...

The Five Scariest Hacks We Saw Last Week
From ACM News

The Five Scariest Hacks We Saw Last Week

If something can connect to a network, it can be hacked. Computers and phones are still popular targets, but increasingly so are cars, home security systems, TVs...

Users of Hidden Net Advised to Ditch Windows
From ACM News

Users of Hidden Net Advised to Ditch Windows

Legitimate users of the Tor anonymous browsing service are being advised to stop using Windows if they want to keep their identity hidden.

Stanford Engineers Receive Award to Improve Supercomputing and Solar Efficiency
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Engineers Receive Award to Improve Supercomputing and Solar Efficiency

A Stanford University researcher team will spend five years working on predicting the efficiency of a relatively untested, poorly understood method of harvesting...

Google's Mini-Films Bring to Life the Early Days of Computing and the Internet
From ACM News

Google's Mini-Films Bring to Life the Early Days of Computing and the Internet

Google is sponsoring a series of mini-films about Britain's role in the early days of computers and the Internet.

Crypto Experts Issue a Call to Arms to Avert the Cryptopocalypse
From ACM News

Crypto Experts Issue a Call to Arms to Avert the Cryptopocalypse

At the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas, a quartet of researchers, Alex Stamos, Tom Ritter, Thomas Ptacek, and Javed Samuel, implored everyone involved...

Watson and the Future of Cognitive Computing
From ACM TechNews

Watson and the Future of Cognitive Computing

Many applications being explored on the Watson supercomputer involve processing huge volumes of data rapidly to enable cognitive systems to engage with people in...

Fbi Taps Hacker Tactics to Spy on Suspects
From ACM News

Fbi Taps Hacker Tactics to Spy on Suspects

Law-enforcement officials in the U.S. are expanding the use of tools routinely used by computer hackers to gather information on suspects, bringing the criminal...

Light Completely Stopped for a Record-breaking Minute
From ACM News

Light Completely Stopped for a Record-breaking Minute

The fastest thing in the universe has come to a complete stop for a record-breaking minute. At full pelt, light would travel about 18 million kilometres in that...

20 Great Years of Linux and Supercomputers
From ACM TechNews

20 Great Years of Linux and Supercomputers

Linux is now the operating system used on 95.2 percent of the world's 500 fastest supercomputers, according to the most recent Top500 supercomputer rankings. 

NSA Announces Winner of Its First Annual 'Science of Security Competition'
From ACM Careers

NSA Announces Winner of Its First Annual 'Science of Security Competition'

A research paper that was highlighted last year at an international symposium is the winner of the National Security Agency's first annual Science of Security (SoS)...

As Machines Get Smarter, Evidence They Learn Like US
From ACM News

As Machines Get Smarter, Evidence They Learn Like US

The brain performs its canonical task—learning—by tweaking its myriad connections according to a secret set of rules.

Guided Growth of Nanowires Leads to Self-Integrated Circuits
From ACM TechNews

Guided Growth of Nanowires Leads to Self-Integrated Circuits

Researchers say they have created self-integrating nanowires whose position, length, and direction can be fully controlled. 

Sharing Resources in Condo Computing
From ACM News

Sharing Resources in Condo Computing

Condominium computing offers researchers the ability to own computing resources while sharing infrastructure costs.

They Know Much More Than You Think
From ACM Opinion

They Know Much More Than You Think

In mid-May, Edward Snowden, an American in his late twenties, walked through the onyx entrance of the Mira Hotel on Nathan Road in Hong Kong and checked in.
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