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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.


Does Gestural Computing Break Fitts' Law?
From ACM TechNews

Does Gestural Computing Break Fitts' Law?

In an interview, Francisco Inchauste, a senior user experience designer for Universal Mind, discusses whether Fitts' Law is still relevant in a post-graphical user...

Study Uses Grins and Frowns to Predict Online Game Hits
From ACM TechNews

Study Uses Grins and Frowns to Predict Online Game Hits

Researchers at Academia Sinica's Institute of Information Science have developed a method for predicting an online game's success by studying gamers' initial emotional...

Will We Ever Simulate the Human Brain?
From ACM News

Will We Ever Simulate the Human Brain?

For years, Henry Markram has claimed that he can simulate the human brain in a computer within a decade. On 23 January 2013, the European Commission told him to...

Self-Driving Cars More Jetsons Than Reality for Google Designers
From ACM News

Self-Driving Cars More Jetsons Than Reality for Google Designers

Google Inc. sees self-driving cars being available to consumers in three to five years. Regulators and the insurance industry aren't so sure it can happen that...

NASA's 'Crazy' Robot Lab
From ACM Careers

NASA's 'Crazy' Robot Lab

It's three in the afternoon, and in their NASA lab in Silicon Valley, California, two engineers are playing with a toy designed for toddlers.

Researchers Push the Boundaries of Virtual Reality
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Push the Boundaries of Virtual Reality

University of Texas at Dallas (UT Dallas) researchers have developed virtual reality technology that creates an environment that interacts with users' sense ofView...

­sing Twitter to Predict the Influence of Lifestyle on Health
From ACM TechNews

­sing Twitter to Predict the Influence of Lifestyle on Health

University of Rochester researchers have used Twitter to model how factors such as social status, exposure to pollution, and interpersonal interaction can influence...

­nseen, All-Out Cyber War on the ­.s. Has Begun
From ACM Opinion

­nseen, All-Out Cyber War on the ­.s. Has Begun

There's a war going on, and it's raging here at home—not in the streets or the fields, but on the Internet.

These Machines Will Be Able to Detect Smells Your Own Nose Cannot
From ACM News

These Machines Will Be Able to Detect Smells Your Own Nose Cannot

Admittedly, it's a little hard to imagine smell scientists, but research published last week has those who study the sense of smell taking sides.

Smartphone Sensors Reveal Security Secrets
From ACM News

Smartphone Sensors Reveal Security Secrets

Data captured by smartphone sensors could help criminals guess codes used to lock the gadgets, say security researchers.

Force-Feedback For Smartphones Tilts Game-Playing Field
From ACM TechNews

Force-Feedback For Smartphones Tilts Game-Playing Field

Researchers in Germany are working on force-feedback technology with gamers in mind. Called muscle propelled force feedback, the system does not have any motors...

Security Protocol For Online Banking, Facebook Has 'serious Weaknesses'
From ACM TechNews

Security Protocol For Online Banking, Facebook Has 'serious Weaknesses'

Royal Holloway, University of LondonA man-in-the-middle attack against the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol can be used to intercept sensitive personal data...

Phreaks and Geeks
From ACM Opinion

Phreaks and Geeks

One of the most heartfelt—and unexpected—remembrances of Aaron Swartz, who committed suicide last month at the age of 26, came from Yale professor Edward Tufte.

Mind-Meld Brain Power Is Best For Steering Spaceships
From ACM TechNews

Mind-Meld Brain Power Is Best For Steering Spaceships

University of Essex researchers have developed a simulator in which pairs of brain-computer interface (BCI) users had to steer a craft toward the exact center of...

Drone Boosters Say Farmers, Not Cops, Are the Biggest ­.s. Robot Market
From ACM News

Drone Boosters Say Farmers, Not Cops, Are the Biggest ­.s. Robot Market

When the flying robots that loiter in Afghanistan's and Yemen's airspace come home, they won't just be headed for the local police station.

Drone Home
From ACM News

Drone Home

A few months ago I borrowed a drone from a company called Parrot. Officially the drone is called an AR.Drone 2.0, but for simplicity's sake, we're just going to...

Palm-Size Nano-Copter Is the Afghanistan War's Latest Spy Drone
From ACM News

Palm-Size Nano-Copter Is the Afghanistan War's Latest Spy Drone

British troops in Afghanistan are flying a drone that’s shrunk down to its essentials: a micro-machine that spies, built for a solitary user.

Wanted: Geeks to Help Fight Pentagon's Cyberwar
From ACM TechNews

Wanted: Geeks to Help Fight Pentagon's Cyberwar

The Pentagon intends to add to the U.S. Cyber Command 4,000 troops and civilians capable of discovering cyberattacks and rapidly rewriting network defenses multiple...

Data Waves Keep Your Wearable Tech in Tune
From ACM TechNews

Data Waves Keep Your Wearable Tech in Tune

A new wireless technique that uses a phenomenon known as Zenneck surface waves could permit wearable technology products to communicate with each other.  

Holograms Seen as Tools to Teach Future Generations About Holocaust
From ACM TechNews

Holograms Seen as Tools to Teach Future Generations About Holocaust

University of Southern California (USC) Shoah Foundation researchers are working on the New Dimensions in Testimony project, which involves developing 3-D holograms...
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