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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.


MIT ­ses Wireless Signals to Identify People Through Walls
From ACM News

MIT ­ses Wireless Signals to Identify People Through Walls

MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab is developing a device that uses wireless signals to identify human figures through walls.

The Computer System That Won Jeopardy Could Soon Help Nasa With Research
From ACM TechNews

The Computer System That Won Jeopardy Could Soon Help Nasa With Research

U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration researchers want to use IBM's Watson to help improve their awareness of scientific and technical literature. 

Coding Bootcamp Grads Boost Their Salaries By 40 Percent on Average
From ACM TechNews

Coding Bootcamp Grads Boost Their Salaries By 40 Percent on Average

Graduates of coding bootcamps found completing the programs helped boost their salaries by an average of 38 percent or $18,000, according to the Course Report. 

Manipulating Faces From Afar in Real Time
From ACM TechNews

Manipulating Faces From Afar in Real Time

Computer scientists say they have created a process dubbed "live facial re-enactment" that can instantaneously transfer facial expressions. 

­c3m Researches Simulator of Human Behavior
From ACM TechNews

­c3m Researches Simulator of Human Behavior

Researchers at the Charles III University of Madrid in Spain are investigating how to build a system that recreates human behavior. 

A Basis For All Cryptography
From ACM TechNews

A Basis For All Cryptography

The inability to practically apply indistinguishability obfuscation to deliver secure cryptography may be mitigated with an efficient method for functional encryption...

Everything You Need to Know About the Vast ­ndersea Network that Makes the Internet Work
From ACM News

Everything You Need to Know About the Vast ­ndersea Network that Makes the Internet Work

Russians submarines and spy ships are "ggressively operating" near the undersea cables that are the backbone of the global Internet—worrying some U.S. intelligence...

Why Self-Driving Cars Must Be Programmed to Kill
From ACM TechNews

Why Self-Driving Cars Must Be Programmed to Kill

The fact that automated cars can never be perfectly safe raises ethical issues, such as how they should be programmed to act in the event of an unavoidable collision...

What It Will Take to Make Computer Science Education Available in All Schools
From ACM TechNews

What It Will Take to Make Computer Science Education Available in All Schools

Marie desJardins of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, sees a great need to expand computer science education in the K-12 grades. 

How Your Device Knows Your Life Through Images
From ACM TechNews

How Your Device Knows Your Life Through Images

Researchers have designed an artificial neural network to identify scenes in photographs taken by people using wearable cameras or mobile phones. 

It's Not Just Vw: A Robust Market For Reprogramming Vehicles
From ACM News

It's Not Just Vw: A Robust Market For Reprogramming Vehicles

Lawmakers want to know more about Volkswagen's massive cheat—how the automaker used software to crank up the power on a vehicle, and then hide the fact.

Google Turning Its Lucrative Web Search Over to AI Machines
From ACM News

Google Turning Its Lucrative Web Search Over to AI Machines

When Google-parent Alphabet Inc. reported eye-popping earnings last week its executives couldn’t stop talking up the company's investments in machine learning and...

­ab Research Studies Cyberattacks Through the Lens of Eeg and Eye Tracking
From ACM TechNews

­ab Research Studies Cyberattacks Through the Lens of Eeg and Eye Tracking

Researchers from the University of Alabama at Birmingham recently presented a study about users' susceptibility to, and ability to detect, certain cyberattacks. ...

Researchers at Johns Hopkins Study Crickets' Aerial Acrobatics in Hopes of Building Better Robots
From ACM TechNews

Researchers at Johns Hopkins Study Crickets' Aerial Acrobatics in Hopes of Building Better Robots

Johns Hopkins University researchers say they have spent more than eight months studying spider crickets in order to develop a new generation of jumping robots. ...

Image Too Good to Be True? DARPA Program Targets Image Doctoring
From ACM TechNews

Image Too Good to Be True? DARPA Program Targets Image Doctoring

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency wants to develop an easy-to-use toolset to detect altered images.

Drivers Push Tesla's Autopilot Beyond Its Abilities
From ACM News

Drivers Push Tesla's Autopilot Beyond Its Abilities

Enthusiastic Tesla owners cheered last Wednesday when the company enabled the use of an automated driving system, called Autopilot, in its Model S all-electric...

We Don't Need Humans on Mars
From ACM Opinion

We Don't Need Humans on Mars

The two mobile robots Spirit and Opportunity were launched from Earth in 2003 and arrived on opposite sides of Mars in 2004. A suite of cameras, instruments, and...

Settling the Controversy Over Photo of Lee Harvey Oswald
From ACM TechNews

Settling the Controversy Over Photo of Lee Harvey Oswald

Dartmouth College researchers have used three-dimensional modeling to confirm the authenticity of a photo of Lee Harvey Oswald holding a rifle. 

Researchers Aim to Make Privacy Second Nature For Software Developers
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Aim to Make Privacy Second Nature For Software Developers

A New York University researcher and colleagues are working to make user privacy an integral part of the software development process. 

Introducing Marty, Stanford's Self-Driving, Electric, Drifting Delorean
From ACM TechNews

Introducing Marty, Stanford's Self-Driving, Electric, Drifting Delorean

A team of Stanford University engineers have built an autonomous, drifting DeLorean powered by electricity to research the physical limits of self-driving systems...
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