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.


Wireless Connections Creep Into Everyday Things
From ACM News

Wireless Connections Creep Into Everyday Things

A car that tells your insurance company how you're driving. A bathroom scale that lets you chart your weight on the Web. And a meter that warns your air conditioner...

Autopsy of a Dead Social Network
From ACM Careers

Autopsy of a Dead Social Network

Friendster is a social network that was founded in 2002, a year before Myspace and two years before Facebook.

How Augmented-Reality Content Might Actually Work
From ACM Opinion

How Augmented-Reality Content Might Actually Work

Augmented reality is very exciting. The promise of it is this: all the information on the Internet overlaid on the real world exactly where and when you need it...

The Ar-15 Is More Than a Gun. It's a Gadget
From ACM Opinion

The Ar-15 Is More Than a Gun. It's a Gadget

I was shaking as I shouldered the rifle and peered through the scope at the small steel target 100 yards downrange.

MIT Researchers Build Quad Hd Tv Chip
From ACM TechNews

MIT Researchers Build Quad Hd Tv Chip

A new high-efficiency video coding (HEVC) chip demonstrates that implementing HEVC algorithms in silicon chips is possible. 

Nielsen Adjusts Its Ratings to Add Web-Linked Tvs
From ACM News

Nielsen Adjusts Its Ratings to Add Web-Linked Tvs

For media executives, there may be nothing worse than a viewer or listener who is not counted.

Predict an Oscar Winner By Crunching the Numbers
From ACM TechNews

Predict an Oscar Winner By Crunching the Numbers

Several organizations are using predictive algorithms to try to identify who will take home an Oscar from the upcoming Academy Awards. 

Cybercrime: It's Serious, But Exactly How Serious?
From Communications of the ACM

Cybercrime: It's Serious, But Exactly How Serious?

Symantec says $110 billion annually while McAfee says $1 trillion. Why can't anyone agree?

Rise of the Swarm
From Communications of the ACM

Rise of the Swarm

Guided by collective intelligence, teams of small, simple robots could soon accomplish amazing feats.

Decoding Dementia
From Communications of the ACM

Decoding Dementia

Computer models may help neurologists unlock the secrets of brain disorders, from Alzheimer's to cancer.

Using 3D Worlds to Visualize Data
From ACM News

Using 3D Worlds to Visualize Data

Take a walk through a human brain? Fly over the surface of Mars?

Can You Feel Me Now? The Sensational Rise of Haptic Interfaces
From ACM News

Can You Feel Me Now? The Sensational Rise of Haptic Interfaces

Your first experience with haptics was probably your phone vibrating in your pocket.

Oscar Sci-Tech Awards Honor Ingenious Screen Science and Engineering
From ACM News

Oscar Sci-Tech Awards Honor Ingenious Screen Science and Engineering

The goal of every movie is for the audience to suspend its collective disbelief and become immersed in the world created on screen.

Apple and Samsung, Frenemies For Life
From ACM Opinion

Apple and Samsung, Frenemies For Life

It was the late Steve Jobs' worst nightmare. A powerful Asian manufacturer, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, uses Google Inc's Android software to create smartphones...

'every New Car' Connected to Web By 2014
From ACM News

'every New Car' Connected to Web By 2014

Five years ago mobile phones were at the forefront of technology, by 2010 the focus was on tablet computers and now billions of yen, dollars and pounds are being...

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...

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...

Ticketmaster Dumps 'hated' Captcha Verification System
From ACM News

Ticketmaster Dumps 'hated' Captcha Verification System

The world's largest online ticket retailer is to stop requiring users to enter hard-to-read words in order to prove they are human.

A Digital Paradise By the Dashboard Light
From ACM News

A Digital Paradise By the Dashboard Light

The driver of the first Corvette, in 1953, was welcomed by a lovely fan of numbers—a sweeping, eye-catching speedometer denominated in 10-mile-per-hour intervals...

Life in Simulation
From Communications of the ACM

Life in Simulation

Computational models are tackling the complexity of biology, from single-celled microbes to human organs.
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account