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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.


Scaanalyzer: An Award-Winning Tool to Find Computing Bottlenecks
From ACM TechNews

Scaanalyzer: An Award-Winning Tool to Find Computing Bottlenecks

ScaAnalyzer is a new tool that can find elusive bugs in software and enable computers to run faster and more efficiently. 

Advertising via Algorithm
From ACM News

Advertising via Algorithm

Global programmatic advertising is projected to account for 60% of all digital display ads this year.

Why Naval Academy Students Are Learning to Sail By the Stars For the First Time in a Decade
From ACM Careers

Why Naval Academy Students Are Learning to Sail By the Stars For the First Time in a Decade

Peter Hogan was surprised at how heavy the sextant felt in his hand when he squinted through its eyeglass this week, the first time he had ever held one.

Eye-Opening Optical Research Projects That Could Supercharge the Internet
From ACM TechNews

Eye-Opening Optical Research Projects That Could Supercharge the Internet

Several research teams around the world are investigating optical technologies that have the potential to make networks--and the Internet--faster and more efficient...

Robot Art Raises Questions About Human Creativity
From ACM TechNews

Robot Art Raises Questions About Human Creativity

Art created by machines raises unanswered questions about its potential and whether it can truly be defined as creative or imaginative. 

Creating a Computer Voice That People Like
From ACM News

Creating a Computer Voice That People Like

When computers speak, how human should they sound?

The Best AI Still Flunks 8th Grade Science
From ACM News

The Best AI Still Flunks 8th Grade Science

In 2012, IBM Watson went to medical school. So said The New York Times, announcing that the tech giant’s artificially intelligent question-and-answer machine had...

History-Making Philae Lander Faces 'eternal Hibernation' on Comet
From ACM News

History-Making Philae Lander Faces 'eternal Hibernation' on Comet

Exactly 15 months after it completed a seemingly impossible journey to land on the surface of a comet, the Philae lander now faces "eternal hibernation," as officials...

Researchers Engineer an Electronics First Opening Door to Flexible Electronics
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Engineer an Electronics First Opening Door to Flexible Electronics

University of Alberta researchers say they have developed a transistor that could lead to flexible electronic devices with wide-ranging applications. 

Virtual Reality Can Significantly Reduce Symptoms of Depression and Anxiety in Just a Month By Turning Sufferers Into Avatars
From ACM TechNews

Virtual Reality Can Significantly Reduce Symptoms of Depression and Anxiety in Just a Month By Turning Sufferers Into Avatars

University College London researchers have developed a virtual-reality system they say could help reduce the symptoms of depression. 

Crowdsourcing Software Could Help US Move House and Stay Where We Are
From ACM TechNews

Crowdsourcing Software Could Help US Move House and Stay Where We Are

Holger Schnadelbach has developed a crowdsourcing website to provide a categorized overview of building adaptations and their causes. 

New Algorithm Improves Speed and Accuracy of Pedestrian Detection
From ACM TechNews

New Algorithm Improves Speed and Accuracy of Pedestrian Detection

University of California, San Diego (UCSD) researchers say they have developed a pedestrian-detection system more accurate than conventional systems. 

The Chips Are Down For Moore’s Law
From ACM News

The Chips Are Down For Moore’s Law

The semiconductor industry will soon abandon its pursuit of Moore's law. Now things could get a lot more interesting.

Would You Bet Against Sex Robots? AI 'could Leave Half of World ­nemployed'
From ACM News

Would You Bet Against Sex Robots? AI 'could Leave Half of World ­nemployed'

Machines could put more than half the world's population out of a job in the next 30 years, according to a computer scientist who said on Saturday that artificial...

Particles in Love: Quantum Mechanics Explored in New Study
From ACM News

Particles in Love: Quantum Mechanics Explored in New Study

Here's a love story at the smallest scales imaginable: particles of light.

How Google Searches Pretty Much Nailed the New Hampshire Primary
From ACM News

How Google Searches Pretty Much Nailed the New Hampshire Primary

Google's ability to look into the future of political contests just notched another win: New Hampshire.

Stanford Engineers' 'law, Order & Algorithms' Data Project Aims to Identify Bias in the Criminal Justice System
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Engineers' 'law, Order & Algorithms' Data Project Aims to Identify Bias in the Criminal Justice System

Stanford University researchers have launched the Project on Law, Order, & Algorithms, a database of 100 million traffic stops from across the U.S. 

Gps Tracking Down to the Centimeter
From ACM TechNews

Gps Tracking Down to the Centimeter

University of California, Riverside researchers say they have developed a more computationally efficient way to process data from global positioning systems. 

Einstein's Gravitational Waves Found at Last
From ACM News

Einstein's Gravitational Waves Found at Last

One hundred years after Albert Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves, scientists have finally spotted these elusive ripples in space-time.

Knowledge Graphs Pick Needles from the Haystack
From ACM News

Knowledge Graphs Pick Needles from the Haystack

Using machine learning to wade through massive amounts of data.
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