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.


A Browser that Speaks Your Language
From ACM News

A Browser that Speaks Your Language

Early adopters can now get a sneak peek at the future of the Web by downloading the latest prerelease, or "beta," version of Chrome, Google's Web browser. One...

Nasa Readies Jobs For Robonaut
From ACM News

Nasa Readies Jobs For Robonaut

The space android called Robonaut 2 was just unpacked from its box last month, but NASA is already thinking up jobs for the darn thing to do, such as replacing...

­sing Adjacent Phone Antennas Could Improve Data Transfer
From ACM TechNews

­sing Adjacent Phone Antennas Could Improve Data Transfer

University of Bristol researchers are studying multiple-input multiple-output technology, which uses several antennas to transmit and receive data, in order to...

Who Is Epsilon and Why Does It Have My Data?
From ACM News

Who Is Epsilon and Why Does It Have My Data?

If you didn't get an email warning this week that your name and email address were part of a database that was breached, consider yourself lucky, and unique.

Secure, Synchronized, Social Tv
From ACM News

Secure, Synchronized, Social Tv

Network coding is an innovative new approach to network design that promises much more efficient use of bandwidth, and MIT researchers have made seminal contributions...

From ACM News

Being John Malkovich: Personal Control of Individual Brain Cells

In philosophy of mind, a "cerebroscope" is a fictitious device, a brain-computer interface in today's language, which reads out the content of somebody's brain...

How Natural Disasters and Political ­nrest Affect the Internet
From ACM TechNews

How Natural Disasters and Political ­nrest Affect the Internet

Northwestern University researchers have developed software that analyzes how natural disasters and political upheaval affect the Internet.

Quantum Trickery Could Lead to Stealth Radar
From ACM News

Quantum Trickery Could Lead to Stealth Radar

Stealthy radar systems and the ability to transmit large amounts of data over long distances are a step closer thanks to a technique that could improve the efficiency...

Microsoft Researchers Tout Low-Cost, Programmable Prototype Data Center Switch
From ACM TechNews

Microsoft Researchers Tout Low-Cost, Programmable Prototype Data Center Switch

Microsoft researchers are developing ServerSwitch, a programmable, low-cost switching chip that could supplement cloud and other network-based services.

University Scientists Reach Beyond the Clouds With a Mobile Phone App to Explore the Outer Atmosphere
From ACM TechNews

University Scientists Reach Beyond the Clouds With a Mobile Phone App to Explore the Outer Atmosphere

A mobile phone served as the on-board data logger, payload tracker, and communications relay during a test flight of the Atmospheric Science Through Robotic Aircraft...

Where Will Larry Page Lead Google?
From ACM Opinion

Where Will Larry Page Lead Google?

In the 10 years since the last time Larry Page was Google's chief executive, the company has changed a bit. It has gone from an ambitious startup to a publicly...

Gravity Satellite Yields 'potato Earth' View
From ACM News

Gravity Satellite Yields 'potato Earth' View

It looks like a giant potato in space. And yet, the information in this model is the sharpest view we have of how gravity varies across the Earth.

From ACM News

Social Search, Without a Social Network

Google may be built on an algorithm for taming the Web, but yesterday the company added social features that will let your friends help determine what ranks high...

From ACM News

New Protocol Turbocharges the Web

Over the past 15 years, Web-based applications have gradually replaced those based on other networking protocols for everything from personal communications to...

Targeted Results
From ACM News

Targeted Results

By envisioning data as "graphs," MIT researchers show how to find local solutions to otherwise overwhelmingly complex problems.

From ACM News

Wireless Networks Coming to ­.s. Subway Systems, Slowly

Years after Wi-Fi connections have become ubiquitous on university campuses, in coffee shops, and in public buildings, the ability to connect to the Internet...

From ACM News

Social-Media Tools ­sed to Target Corporate Secrets

Not long after airstrikes began in Libya earlier this month, certain attorneys at four U.S. law firms, known for having high-profile clients in the oil industry...

Companies Hope to 'program' the Internet
From ACM News

Companies Hope to 'program' the Internet

Most data networks could be faster, more energy efficient, and more secure. But network hardware—switches, routers, and other devices—is essentially locked down...

Can Google Reinvent Web Video?
From ACM News

Can Google Reinvent Web Video?

An ambitious attempt by Google to shift the Web over to a new, royalty-free video format has taken significant strides. New software has been released that can...

The Secret to Some of Lucasfilm's Magic: Nvidia's Gpu Chips
From ACM News

The Secret to Some of Lucasfilm's Magic: Nvidia's Gpu Chips

Like the visual effects you've been seeing in movies these days? Of course, you already know that in most cases they're computer-generated. And as you've seen...
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account