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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.


The Gene Editor Crispr Won't Fully Fix Sick People Anytime Soon. Here's Why
From ACM News

The Gene Editor Crispr Won't Fully Fix Sick People Anytime Soon. Here's Why

This week, scientists will gather in Washington, D.C., for an annual meeting devoted to gene therapy—a long-struggling field that has clawed its way back to respectability...

The Leap Second: Because Our Clocks Are More Accurate Than the Earth
From ACM News

The Leap Second: Because Our Clocks Are More Accurate Than the Earth

We've recently been treated to that extra day in February that reminds us that 2016 is a leap year.

Looking For Art in Artificial Intelligence
From ACM TechNews

Looking For Art in Artificial Intelligence

Dartmouth College professors will explore the potential for algorithms to produce human-quality dance music, sonnets, and short stories. 

Does Big Data Hold the Clue to Traffic Fatalities?
From ACM TechNews

Does Big Data Hold the Clue to Traffic Fatalities?

Researchers are developing a high-performance computing-based framework to identify patterns in data related to driving deaths and severe injuries. 

New Tech Uses Hardware, Software to Train Dogs More Efficiently
From ACM TechNews

New Tech Uses Hardware, Software to Train Dogs More Efficiently

North Carolina State University researchers have developed a customized suite of technologies that enables a computer to autonomously train a dog. 

Researchers Develop Dissolvable Memristor
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Develop Dissolvable Memristor

A research team from China and the U.K. has produced a memristor-like device made from egg proteins, magnesium, and tungsten. 

Headaches Likely to Grow Over Auto Cybersecurity Concerns
From ACM TechNews

Headaches Likely to Grow Over Auto Cybersecurity Concerns

Issues related to automobile cybersecurity are likely to increase, but U.S. auto cybersecurity standards are not expected until at least 2018. 

Hacking Into Homes: 'smart Home' Security Flaws Found in Popular System
From ACM TechNews

Hacking Into Homes: 'smart Home' Security Flaws Found in Popular System

University of Michigan researchers have developed a way to hack into the leading "smart home" automation system and get the PIN code to a home's front door. 

New Health Sensing Tool Measures Lung Function Over a Phone Call, From Anywhere in the World
From ACM TechNews

New Health Sensing Tool Measures Lung Function Over a Phone Call, From Anywhere in the World

University of Washington researchers have developed a health-sensing tool that can accurately measure lung function over a phone call. 

Creating a Prosthetic Hand That Can Feel
From ACM TechNews

Creating a Prosthetic Hand That Can Feel

Researchers have developed a "myoelectric" haptic system designed to work with a prosthetic hand. 

Ibm Inches Ahead of Google in Race For Quantum Computing Power
From ACM News

Ibm Inches Ahead of Google in Race For Quantum Computing Power

All kinds of things are hooked up to the Internet these days, but Jerry Chow's computer stands out. Chilled by liquid helium, his superconducting processor uses...

Inside the Secret Meeting Where Wall Street Tested Digital Cash
From ACM News

Inside the Secret Meeting Where Wall Street Tested Digital Cash

On a recent Monday in April, more than 100 executives from some of the world's largest financial institutions gathered for a private meeting at the Times Square...

Avoiding the Crush
From ACM News

Avoiding the Crush

Using algorithms to anticipate crowd behavior.

­wm Researchers Create a Better Way to Find Out 'when'
From ACM TechNews

­wm Researchers Create a Better Way to Find Out 'when'

An international team of scientists has devised a mathematical tool that can reduce timing uncertainties during changing events.

Machines Can Learn to Respond to New Situations Like Human Beings Would
From ACM TechNews

Machines Can Learn to Respond to New Situations Like Human Beings Would

KU Leuven researchers have shown machines can learn to respond to unfamiliar objects like a human would.

Scientists Teaching Machines to Make Clinical Trials More Successful
From ACM TechNews

Scientists Teaching Machines to Make Clinical Trials More Successful

Researchers at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center are using machine-learning technology to find better ways to recruit patients for clinical trials. 

Claude Shannon, the Father of the Information Age, Turns 1100100
From ACM News

Claude Shannon, the Father of the Information Age, Turns 1100100

Twelve years ago, Robert McEliece, a mathematician and engineer at Caltech, won the Claude E. Shannon Award, the highest honor in the field of information theory...

The Struggle with Image Glut
From ACM News

The Struggle with Image Glut

As the fruit-fly larva wriggles forwards in the video, a crackle of neural activity shoots up its half-millimetre-long body.

Thinking Outside the Sample
From ACM TechNews

Thinking Outside the Sample

Researchers have developed a framework they say could help computers learn how to process and identify images faster and more accurately. 

Inspired By Nature
From ACM TechNews

Inspired By Nature

University of Washington researchers are collaborating with Microsoft to encode, store, and retrieve digital text and images using DNA molecules.
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