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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.


New, Better Way to Build Circuits For World's First ­seful Quantum Computers
From ACM TechNews

New, Better Way to Build Circuits For World's First ­seful Quantum Computers

A team at Penn State performed a single quantum operation on individual atoms on separate stacked planes. Professor David S. Weiss says the technique highlights...

Clever Attack ­ses the Sound of a Computer's Fan to Steal Data
From ACM News

Clever Attack ­ses the Sound of a Computer's Fan to Steal Data

In the past two years a group of researchers in Israel has become highly adept at stealing data from air-gapped computers—those machines prized by hackers that,...

Nasa Rover Findings Point to a More Earth-Like Martian Past
From ACM News

Nasa Rover Findings Point to a More Earth-Like Martian Past

Chemicals found in Martian rocks by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover suggest the Red Planet once had more oxygen in its atmosphere than it does now.

As It Searches For Suspects, the Fbi May Be Looking at You
From ACM News

As It Searches For Suspects, the Fbi May Be Looking at You

The FBI has access to nearly 412 million photos in its facial recognition system—perhaps including the one on your driver's license.

Tour De France to ­se Thermal Imaging to Fight Mechanical Doping
From ACM News

Tour De France to ­se Thermal Imaging to Fight Mechanical Doping

They call it "mechanical doping," but the name simply doesn't do it justice.

Nasa's Juno Spacecraft Closing in on Jupiter
From ACM News

Nasa's Juno Spacecraft Closing in on Jupiter

Last Friday (6/24), at exactly 9:57 and 48 seconds a.m. PDT, NASA's Juno spacecraft was 5.5 million miles (8.9 million kilometers) from its July 4th appointment...

Expansion of Early ­niverse Modelled in ­nprecedented Detail
From ACM News

Expansion of Early ­niverse Modelled in ­nprecedented Detail

For the first time, cosmologists have used the full power of Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity to perform detailed calculations of the Universe's evolution...

Data Centers Are No Longer The Energy Hogs They Once Were
From ACM News

Data Centers Are No Longer The Energy Hogs They Once Were

Efforts by some of the world's largest Internet companies like Google, Facebook and Amazon to reduce the amount of energy their data centers consume is now bearing...

Supercomputer Powered By Mobile Chips Suggests New Threat to Intel
From ACM News

Supercomputer Powered By Mobile Chips Suggests New Threat to Intel


First Crispr Clinical Trial Gets Green Light from ­S Panel
From ACM News

First Crispr Clinical Trial Gets Green Light from ­S Panel

CRISPR, the genome-editing technology that has taken biomedical science by storm, is finally nearing human trials.

Bletchley Park in 360: See Inside Britain's Enigma-Breaking Hq
From ACM News

Bletchley Park in 360: See Inside Britain's Enigma-Breaking Hq

In a special video production, CNET takes you inside the hallowed halls of Bletchley Park, the stately home in Buckinghamshire, England where the Enigma code was...

How Google Deepmind's Ant Soccer Skills Can Help Improve Your Search Results
From ACM TechNews

How Google Deepmind's Ant Soccer Skills Can Help Improve Your Search Results

Google's DeepMind artificial intelligence is learning to navigate thee-dimensional environments and games, including a soccer game played as a virtual ant.

How Well Do Facial Recognition Algorithms Cope With a Million Strangers?
From ACM TechNews

How Well Do Facial Recognition Algorithms Cope With a Million Strangers?

The MegaFace Challenge aims to assess the performance of face-recognition algorithms at the million-person scale.

Augmented Eternity: Scientists Aim to Let ­S Speak From Beyond the Grave
From ACM TechNews

Augmented Eternity: Scientists Aim to Let ­S Speak From Beyond the Grave

Augmented eternity, the posthumous preservation of a person's knowledge, beliefs, and personality, could be feasible within 15 to 25 years.

No Place For the Old? Is Software Development a Young Person's Game?
From ACM TechNews

No Place For the Old? Is Software Development a Young Person's Game?

Statistics and anecdotal evidence suggest software developers tend to be under 30.

Graph Matching in Theory and Practice
From Communications of the ACM

Graph Matching in Theory and Practice

A theoretical breakthrough in graph isomorphism excites complexity experts, but will it lead to any practical improvements?

Accelerating Search
From Communications of the ACM

Accelerating Search

The latest in machine learning helps high-energy physicists handle the enormous amounts of data produced by the Large Hadron Collider.

Legal Advice on the Smartphone
From Communications of the ACM

Legal Advice on the Smartphone

New apps help individuals contest traffic, parking tickets.

Quantum Computer Makes First High-Energy Physics Simulation
From ACM News

Quantum Computer Makes First High-Energy Physics Simulation

Physicists have performed the first full simulation of a high-energy physics experiment—the creation of pairs of particles and their antiparticles—on a quantum...

Nasa Scientists Discover ­nexpected Mineral on Mars
From ACM News

Nasa Scientists Discover ­nexpected Mineral on Mars

Scientists have discovered an unexpected mineral in a rock sample at Gale Crater on Mars, a finding that may alter our understanding of how the planet evolved.
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