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.


From ACM News

Tide Turns Against Million-Dollar Maths Proof

Initially hailed as a solution to the biggest question in computer science, the latest attempt to prove P ≠ NP—otherwise known as the "P vs NP" problem—seems to...

Nfl Considers Ball-Tracking Chips For Accuracy
From ACM News

Nfl Considers Ball-Tracking Chips For Accuracy

From end zone to end zone, an NFL field is exactly 3,600 inches, and it’s easy enough for referees to spot a ball precisely when action stays within the bounds...

From ACM News

Hiding Files in Flickr Pics Will Fool Web Censors

Life is about to become more difficult for countries trying to censor access to foreign Websites. A system dubbed Collage will allow users in these countries...

Gesture-Based Computing Takes a Serious Turn
From ACM News

Gesture-Based Computing Takes a Serious Turn

Call me a creature of habit, but I approach any new computer interface with a sense of apprehension.

CAVE Home to Cutting-Edge Experiments
From ACM TechNews

CAVE Home to Cutting-Edge Experiments

Several projects are being conducted at the University of Illinois' simulation laboratory, which can test human perception and cognitive abilities, and can create...

Research Aims to Improve Speech Recognition Software
From ACM News

Research Aims to Improve Speech Recognition Software

Research conducted by Binghamton University's Stephen Zahorian aims to improve the accuracy of today's automatic speech recognition technology.

Dual Antennas Would Boost Cell-Phone Signals
From ACM News

Dual Antennas Would Boost Cell-Phone Signals

New design would mean fewer dropped calls, longer battery life.

'god Couldn't Do Faster': Rubik's Cube Mystery Solved
From ACM News

'god Couldn't Do Faster': Rubik's Cube Mystery Solved

It has taken 15 years to get to this point, but it is now clear that every possible scrambled arrangement of the Rubik's cube can be solved in a maximum of 20...

Speech Recognition Systems Must Get Smarter, Professor Says
From ACM TechNews

Speech Recognition Systems Must Get Smarter, Professor Says

University of Rochester professor James Allen says the key to making speech-recognition systems less frustrating to use is giving them a deeper understanding of...

From ACM News

In a Video Game, Tackling the Complexities of Protein Folding

In a match that pitted video game players against the best known computer program designed for the task, the gamers outperformed the software in figuring out...

Star Wars Meets Ups as Robonaut Packed For Space
From ACM News

Star Wars Meets Ups as Robonaut Packed For Space

Getting into space isn't necessarily easy for astronauts, and it's not much easier for a robotic astronaut, either.

From ACM News

A Sidewalk Disappearing Act

Automatically removing people from street-level imagery could help prevent privacy complaints.

Future on Display: Technology You'll Want to Stroke
From ACM News

Future on Display: Technology You'll Want to Stroke

Whatever you might expect from the latest computer technology, fur is unlikely to be one of them.

Stanford and Uc Berkeley Create Massively Collaborative Math
From ACM News

Stanford and Uc Berkeley Create Massively Collaborative Math

Have you been pondering the probability that two random integers are relatively prime? The answer—6/π²—awaits you in cyberspace.

Holographic Displays, Robot Eyes Hint at Your Interactive Future
From ACM News

Holographic Displays, Robot Eyes Hint at Your Interactive Future

The eyes may be the window to the soul. But what do you see when you look into robotic eyes so real that it’s almost impossible to tell they are just empty, mechanical...

From ACM News

On the Web's Cutting Edge, Anonymity in Name Only

You may not know a company called [x+1] Inc., but it may well know a lot about you.

Pentagon Demands Wikileaks
From ACM News

Pentagon Demands Wikileaks

A Pentagon spokesman on Thursday demanded that the secret-spilling website WikiLeaks return and delete all the classified Defense Department documents in its...

From ACM News

Private Browsing Modes Leak Data

The private browsing modes on modern browsers leak information about where people have visited, suggests a study.

For Kevin Mitnick, Staying Legal Is Job One
From ACM News

For Kevin Mitnick, Staying Legal Is Job One

Kevin Mitnick was eager to participate in a social-engineering contest at the Defcon hacker conference in Las Vegas last weekend and was told he would target Microsoft...

From ACM News

In a Video Game, Tackling the Complexities of Protein Folding

In a match that pitted video game players against the best known computer program designed for the task, the gamers outperformed the software in figuring out...
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account