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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.


China's Moon Rover Awake but Immobile
From ACM News

China's Moon Rover Awake but Immobile

China's Moon rover Yutu, or "Jade Rabbit," has stopped hopping. But its ears are still twitching—and communicating with Earth.

With Oculus Rift and Project Morpheus, a Virtual Battleground May Finally Be Here
From ACM Careers

With Oculus Rift and Project Morpheus, a Virtual Battleground May Finally Be Here

Virtual reality has never quite materialized for most consumers.

Why Mh370 Could Still Talk to Satellites After Its Other Comms Went Dark
From ACM News

Why Mh370 Could Still Talk to Satellites After Its Other Comms Went Dark

It's the latest mystery in the hunt for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: Was a key communications system on board the plane disabled before or after the co-pilot calmly...

Nasa Historic Earth Images Still Hold Research Value
From ACM News

Nasa Historic Earth Images Still Hold Research Value

NASA's Seasat satellite became history long ago, but it left a legacy of images of Earth's ocean, volcanoes, forests and other features that were made by the first...

Three Questions For Leslie Lamport, Winner of Computing's Top Prize
From ACM Opinion

Three Questions For Leslie Lamport, Winner of Computing's Top Prize

This year's winner of the Turing Award—often referred to as the Nobel Prize of computing—was announced yesterday as Leslie Lamport, a computer scientist whose research...

Jonathan Ive Designs Tomorrow
From ACM News

Jonathan Ive Designs Tomorrow

We use Jonathan Ive's products to help us to eat, drink and sleep, to work, travel, relax, read, listen and watch, to shop, chat, date and have sex.

Stanford Makes Flexible Carbon Nanotube Circuits More Reliable and Power Efficient
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Makes Flexible Carbon Nanotube Circuits More Reliable and Power Efficient

Stanford University researchers have developed a process to create flexible chips that can tolerate power fluctuations in much the same way as silicon circuitry...

Facebook Creates Software That Matches Faces Almost as Well as You Do
From ACM News

Facebook Creates Software That Matches Faces Almost as Well as You Do

Asked whether two unfamiliar photos of faces show the same person, a human being will get it right 97.53 percent of the time.

You Can Take Selfies of Your Aorta With This Mini Camera
From ACM News

You Can Take Selfies of Your Aorta With This Mini Camera

Scientific studies of selfies have yielded interesting insights on personalities, gender differences, and national moods, but scientist F. Levent Degertekin has...

The First News Report on the L.a. Earthquake Was Written By a Robot
From ACM Careers

The First News Report on the L.a. Earthquake Was Written By a Robot

Ken Schwencke, a journalist and programmer for the Los Angeles Times, was jolted awake at 6:25 a.m. on Monday by an earthquake.

The Future of Brain Implants
From ACM News

The Future of Brain Implants

What would you give for a retinal chip that let you see in the dark or for a next-generation cochlear implant that let you hear any conversation in a noisy restaurant...

Nasa Technology Views Birth of the Universe
From ACM News

Nasa Technology Views Birth of the Universe

Astronomers are announcing today that they have acquired the first direct evidence that gravitational waves rippled through our infant universe during an explosive...

­.s. Navy Strategists Have a Long History of Finding the Lost
From ACM News

­.s. Navy Strategists Have a Long History of Finding the Lost

The uncertainties surrounding Malaysia Airlines Flight 370’s disappearance are enormous, but naval strategists have been unraveling lost-at-sea mysteries as far...

Careers in Statistics Evolve and Expand
From ACM Careers

Careers in Statistics Evolve and Expand

Workers with statistics backgrounds have long been in healthy demand for academic, actuarial, pharmaceutical, or government jobs.

All Hacking Eyes on the Prize Money at Cansecwest
From ACM Careers

All Hacking Eyes on the Prize Money at Cansecwest

When it comes to hacking, it turns out that greed really is good.

Scientists Build Thinnest-Possible Leds to Be Stronger, More Energy Efficient
From ACM TechNews

Scientists Build Thinnest-Possible Leds to Be Stronger, More Energy Efficient

University of Washington researchers say they have developed the thinnest-known light-emitting diode that can be used as a source of light energy in electronics...

Chipmaking: When Silicon Leaves the Valley
From ACM TechNews

Chipmaking: When Silicon Leaves the Valley

Researchers are pursuing new ways of making chips, as it grows increasingly difficult to fit more transistors onto a silicon wafer. 

Where in the Solar System Are We Most Likely to Find Life?
From ACM News

Where in the Solar System Are We Most Likely to Find Life?

Last week, NASA announced one of its most exciting missions in recent memory: a plan to visit Europa, one of Jupiter's largest moons.

Soft Robotic Fish Moves Like the Real Thing
From ACM News

Soft Robotic Fish Moves Like the Real Thing

Soft robots—which don’t just have soft exteriors but are also powered by fluid flowing through flexible channels—have become a sufficiently popular research topic...

Taking an Age-Old Approach to ­i
From ACM News

Taking an Age-Old Approach to ­i

Web and app designers need to be mindful of the changing capabilities of aging users.
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