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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.


How Ad Blockers Have Triggered an Arms Race on the Web
From ACM TechNews

How Ad Blockers Have Triggered an Arms Race on the Web

A team at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology has conducted the first large-scale analysis of ad-block detection on the Internet. 

IBM Watson's Creative Director on Amazon Echo and How AI Can Save Lives
From ACM TechNews

IBM Watson's Creative Director on Amazon Echo and How AI Can Save Lives

In an interview, Maya Weinstein, creative director at IBM Watson, discusses artificial intelligence assistants and how the technology can help save lives. 

A Car's Computer Can 'fingerprint' You in Minutes Based on How You Drive
From ACM TechNews

A Car's Computer Can 'fingerprint' You in Minutes Based on How You Drive

Data collected from a car's internal computer network, or its CAN bus, can identify its driver based on driving style, a new study has found. 

Pluto's Heart: Like a Cosmic 'lava Lamp'
From ACM News

Pluto's Heart: Like a Cosmic 'lava Lamp'

Combining computer models with topographic and compositional data gathered by NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft last summer, New Horizons team members have determined...

Doubling Down on Schrodinger's Cat
From ACM TechNews

Doubling Down on Schrodinger's Cat

A team of Yale University researchers has created a more exotic version of the classic Schrodinger's cat paradox. 

Jumproach Is a Robotic Bug That Leaps and Flips Just Like an Insect
From ACM TechNews

Jumproach Is a Robotic Bug That Leaps and Flips Just Like an Insect

Researchers say they have developed a new kind of jumping mechanism for robots that has the potential to scale from tiny hops to a catapult launch. 

Child's Play: Australia's Newest Roboticists See Eye-to-Eye With R2-D2
From ACM TechNews

Child's Play: Australia's Newest Roboticists See Eye-to-Eye With R2-D2

Queensland University of Technology's Christina Chalmers says because the growth of robotic coding requires educators to do more to promote student education in...

'super Mario Brothers' Is Hard
From ACM TechNews

'super Mario Brothers' Is Hard

Researchers found the problem of solving a level in the "Super Mario Brothers" video game is as challenging as the most vexing problems in the PSPACE complexity...

The White House Is Finally Prepping For an AI-Powered Future
From ACM TechNews

The White House Is Finally Prepping For an AI-Powered Future

The White House is adamant the government must determine how to regulate and utilize artificial intelligence technology before it gets out of control. 

Tech Turns to Biology as Data Storage Needs Explode
From ACM News

Tech Turns to Biology as Data Storage Needs Explode

Researchers have decoded the genomes of mammoths and a 700,000-year-old horse using DNA fragments extracted from fossils in the past few years. DNA clearly persists...

Rosetta's Comet Contains Ingredients For Life
From ACM News

Rosetta's Comet Contains Ingredients For Life

Ingredients regarded as crucial for the origin of life on Earth have been discovered at the comet that ESA's Rosetta spacecraft has been probing for almost two...

Nasa Radar Finds Ice Age Record in Mars' Polar Cap
From ACM News

Nasa Radar Finds Ice Age Record in Mars' Polar Cap

Scientists using radar data from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) have found a record of the most recent Martian ice age recorded in the planet's north...

Two-Hundred-Terabyte Maths Proof Is Largest Ever
From ACM News

Two-Hundred-Terabyte Maths Proof Is Largest Ever

Three computer scientists have announced the largest-ever mathematics proof: a file that comes in at a whopping 200 terabytes1, roughly equivalent to all the digitized...

Self-Driving Truck Acts Like an Animal
From ACM TechNews

Self-Driving Truck Acts Like an Animal

The traditional way of developing vehicles may not work when developing future autonomous vehicles.

The Pipes Powering the Internet Are Nearly Full--What Do We Do?
From ACM TechNews

The Pipes Powering the Internet Are Nearly Full--What Do We Do?

The optical fibers that transmit data throughout the Internet have almost reached their capacity limits.

­sing Cellphone Data to Study the Spread of Cholera
From ACM TechNews

­sing Cellphone Data to Study the Spread of Cholera

Researchers recently led a study showing how human mobility patterns contributed to the spread of a cholera epidemic in Senegal in 2005. 

Artificial Intelligence Is Far From Matching Humans, Panel Says
From ACM News

Artificial Intelligence Is Far From Matching Humans, Panel Says

Never mind Terminator-like killer robots. Artificial intelligence researchers are grappling with more realistic questions like whether their creations will take...

On Your Mark. Get Set. Print!
From ACM News

On Your Mark. Get Set. Print!

Athletic footwear is about to be customized in the extreme, through a combination of computer vision-enabled scanning and three-dimensional printing.

Illuminating Life's Building Blocks
From ACM News

Illuminating Life's Building Blocks

Biophysicist Joerg Bewersdorf says that 2006 was fluorescence microscopy's annus mirabilis—a 'miraculous year' as momentous in its own way as 1905, when Albert...

Japanese-Language Myshake App Crowdsources Earthquake Shaking
From ACM TechNews

Japanese-Language Myshake App Crowdsources Earthquake Shaking

Researchers have released a Japanese version of an application that crowdsources ground-shaking information from smartphones to detect earthquakes. 
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