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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.


Homemade Cyberweapon Worries Federal Officials
From ACM TechNews

Homemade Cyberweapon Worries Federal Officials

Security researchers Dillon Beresford and Brian Meixell recently developed a cyberweapon similar to the Stuxnet computer worm that disrupted Iran's nuclear program...

Open Source Hardware: Seven Questions For Limor Fried
From ACM News

Open Source Hardware: Seven Questions For Limor Fried

Limor Fried discusses the future of the open source hardware movement, Facebook’s decision to open source its new data center, and being featured on the cover of...

Ncsa Installing 153 Teraflop Supercomputer
From ACM TechNews

Ncsa Installing 153 Teraflop Supercomputer

The U.S. National Center for Supercomputing Applications has begun installing Forge, a 153-teraflop hybrid supercomputer that contains both central processing units...

Is Graphene a Miracle Material?
From ACM News

Is Graphene a Miracle Material?

The material graphene was touted as "the next big thing" even before its pioneers were handed the Nobel Prize last year. Many believe it could spell the end for...

From ACM News

The Mind-Expanding World of Quantum Computing

On the outskirts of Oxford lives a brilliant and distressingly thin physicist named David Deutsch, who believes in multiple universes and has conceived of an...

Lack of Training Hinders GP­ in HPC
From ACM TechNews

Lack of Training Hinders GP­ in HPC

Several factors, including the lack of training in parallel programming and support from independent software vendors, are major obstacles keeping general-purpose...

Successful First Test Drive of "sighted" Wheelchair
From ACM TechNews

Successful First Test Drive of "sighted" Wheelchair

Lulea University of Technology researchers have developed an electric wheelchair that can detect the surrounding environment and transmit the information to a visually...

Which Technologies Get Better Faster?
From ACM TechNews

Which Technologies Get Better Faster?

Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers have developed a mathematical model to predict which technologies are the most likely to rapidly advance and be...

Memristors' Current Carves Protected Channels
From ACM News

Memristors' Current Carves Protected Channels

A circuit component touted as the "missing link" of electronics is starting to give up the secrets of how it works.

Toward Faster Transistors
From ACM News

Toward Faster Transistors

In the 1980s and '90s, competition in the computer industry was all about "clock speed"—how many megahertz, and ultimately gigahertz, a chip could boast. But...

Galileo Data Reveal Magma Ocean Under Jupiter Moon
From ACM News

Galileo Data Reveal Magma Ocean Under Jupiter Moon

New data analysis from NASA's Galileo spacecraft reveals a subsurface ocean of molten or partially molten magma beneath the surface of Jupiter's volcanic moon...

Quantum Calculations Can Make Atomic Clocks of the Future Far More Accurate
From ACM News

Quantum Calculations Can Make Atomic Clocks of the Future Far More Accurate

New calculations of how atoms swell when they’re warmed up can help make the next generation of atomic clocks 10 times more precise.

Forecast For Processing and Storing Ever-Expanding Science Data: Cloudy
From ACM TechNews

Forecast For Processing and Storing Ever-Expanding Science Data: Cloudy

Scientists that previously relied on time-shared access to high-performance computers to analyze large datasets are now turning to cloud-based services from the...

NASA's Dawn Captures First Image of Nearing Asteroid
From ACM News

NASA's Dawn Captures First Image of Nearing Asteroid

NASA's Dawn spacecraft has obtained its first image of the giant asteroid Vesta, which will help fine-tune navigation during its approach. Dawn is expected to...

Technology vs. Terrorists
From ACM News

Technology vs. Terrorists

Advanced technologies, including stealth helicopters, helmet-mounted video cameras, and sophisticated data analysis, are helping find terrorists like Osama bin...

How Three-Dimensional Transistors Went from Lab to Fab
From ACM News

How Three-Dimensional Transistors Went from Lab to Fab

Intel's new three-dimensional transistor design, announced last week, is the culmination of more than a decade of research and development work that began in...

Good Thinking, Einstein
From ACM News

Good Thinking, Einstein

The longest experiment in space physics began with three men in a university swimming pool arguing about Einstein. It ended Wednesday, after 52 years and $750...

Intel Increases Transistor Speed by Building ­pward
From ACM News

Intel Increases Transistor Speed by Building ­pward

Intel announced that by building a key portion of a microprocessor's transistor above the chip's surface, it has found a way to make smaller, faster, lower-power...

Researchers Use Xbox Technology to Improve Programs
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Use Xbox Technology to Improve Programs

University of Texas at Arlington researchers are using Microsofte's Xbox Kinect technology to improve virtual sign language software.

From ACM TechNews

Humanoid Robots Catch Imagination at National Symposium in Pune

Research and Development Establishment, Engineers, recently held a two-day symposium on robotics and autonomous vehicles, which featured 250 delegates who discussed...
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