acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

News


bg-corner

An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


'chinese Google' ­nveils Visual Search Engine Powered By Fake Brains
From ACM News

'chinese Google' ­nveils Visual Search Engine Powered By Fake Brains

Chinese search giant Baidu has served up its first ever visual search engine, which allows users to finally query the web using only images as input instead of...

How Social Media Is Changing Disaster Response
From ACM News

How Social Media Is Changing Disaster Response

When Hurricane Katrina ravaged the U.S. Gulf Coast in 2005, Facebook was the new kid on the block. There was no Twitter for news updates, and the iPhone was not...

Wearable Computing Pioneer Steve Mann: Who Watches the Watchmen?
From ACM TechNews

Wearable Computing Pioneer Steve Mann: Who Watches the Watchmen?

Steve Mann has been developing wearable technology for the past 30 years, adapting computers, screens, and optics into wearable devices.

How Wearable Tech Will Fuel the Internet of Things
From ACM TechNews

How Wearable Tech Will Fuel the Internet of Things

Wearable technologies are expected to play an integral role in the Internet of things. 

Spies Like ­s: How We All Helped Build Prism
From ACM Careers

Spies Like ­s: How We All Helped Build Prism

It used to be that the National Security Agency and its ilk had to pay through the nose for the latest in spying technology.

DARPA Robotics Challenge: The Search For the Perfect Robot Soldier
From ACM Careers

DARPA Robotics Challenge: The Search For the Perfect Robot Soldier

The Atlas robot looks something out of the post-apocalyptic future, or maybe a Will Smith blockbuster. It's a 330lb cyborg with eerily human-like hands and a head...

How the ­.s. ­ses Technology to Mine More Data More Quickly
From ACM News

How the ­.s. ­ses Technology to Mine More Data More Quickly

When American analysts hunting terrorists sought new ways to comb through the troves of phone records, e-mails, and other data piling up as digital communications...

2-D Electronics Take a Step Forward
From ACM TechNews

2-D Electronics Take a Step Forward

Scientists hope to join molybdenum disulfide, a semiconductor, with graphene, which has no band gap, and hexagonal boron nitride, an insulator, to form field-effect...

What Would Happen If All Satellites Stopped Working?
From ACM Opinion

What Would Happen If All Satellites Stopped Working?

We may not always realise it, but we depend on space technology orbiting the Earth.

Studying Hurricanes With Swarms of Smart Drones
From ACM News

Studying Hurricanes With Swarms of Smart Drones

 Remember in Twister when they threw all those little sensors into the tornado? University of Florida scientists are working on a similar plan for hurricanes involving...

Drone Nation: A New Industry Takes Flight
From ACM Careers

Drone Nation: A New Industry Takes Flight

By 2025 the drone industry will employ 100,000 people and be worth $82 billion globally, according to the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International...

'hidden' Economy in Silicon Valley Built Without Advanced Degrees
From ACM Careers

'hidden' Economy in Silicon Valley Built Without Advanced Degrees

Silicon Valley is world-renowned for the Nobel Prize winners and MacArthur "geniuses" behind theoretical breakthroughs in science, technology, engineering, and...

From ACM News

Administration Says Mining of Data Is Crucial to Fight Terror

In early September 2009, an e-mail passed through an Internet address in Peshawar, Pakistan, that was being monitored by the vast computers controlled by American...

From ACM News

People's Locations Could Be Tracked

Data collected by the National Security Agency's program that monitors Americans' phone calls could be used to track millions of people's locations through their...

Hacking the Drone War's Secret History
From ACM News

Hacking the Drone War's Secret History

In 2008 U.S. troops in Iraq discovered that Shi’ite insurgents had figured out how to tap and record video feeds from overhead American drones. Now you too can...

Atom by Atom, Bond by Bond, a Chemical Reaction Caught in the Act
From ACM News

Atom by Atom, Bond by Bond, a Chemical Reaction Caught in the Act

When Felix Fischer of the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory set out to develop nanostructures made of graphene using a new, controlled...

If Our Gadgets Could Measure Our Emotions
From ACM News

If Our Gadgets Could Measure Our Emotions

On a recent family outing, my mother and sister got into a shouting match. But they weren’t mad at each other—they were yelling at the iPhone’s turn-by-turn navigation...

Tiny Airplanes and Subs From ­niversity of Florida Laboratory Could Be Next Hurricane Hunters
From ACM TechNews

Tiny Airplanes and Subs From ­niversity of Florida Laboratory Could Be Next Hurricane Hunters

Miniature unmanned vehicles could be used to predict the strength and path of hurricanes. 

Contact Lens Computer: Like Google Glass, Without the Glasses
From ACM News

Contact Lens Computer: Like Google Glass, Without the Glasses

For those who find Google Glass indiscreet, electronic contact lenses that outfit the user’s cornea with a display may one day provide an alternative.

President Obama: 'right Balance' on Surveillance
From ACM News

President Obama: 'right Balance' on Surveillance

President Barack Obama defended his administration’s data-gathering programs Friday, calling them necessary for national security and well within the bounds of...
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account