The opinion archive provides access to past opinion stories from Communications of the ACM and other sources by date.
Former Grateful Dead percussionist Mickey Hart takes pride in his brain.
Can Google’s winning ways be applied to all kinds of businesses?
At the height of summer, when London was baking in unseasonable heat, I made an ill-fated trip to the Serpentine lido in central London.
In rebuking Apple and Google for their new smartphone encryption polices on Thursday, FBI Director James B. Comey became the latest law enforcement official to evoke worst-case scenario arguments: What of the child predator,their…
Everyone understands what it means to own a plunger.
Believe it or not, I do have friends who would describe themselves as not liking math, and every so often one of them will share this meme on Facebook: And then Satan said, "Put the alphabet in math."
In an interview, Numenta founder Jeff Hawkins says he expects his vision of brain-inspired artificial intelligence (AI) to win out over other approaches. He says Numenta's technology is "a foundation for the next 60, 70, 100…
Vern Brownell, CEO of quantum computing startup D-Wave, says the company now has customers using its computers to tackle real problems.
The starship Enterprise has got to be one of the most beautiful fictional spacecraft ever created.
Alibaba founder Jack Ma and the Notorious BIG may seem like two very different people—OK, fine, they're polar opposites—but on stage at the Clinton Global Initiative’s Annual Meeting in New York City on Wednesday, Ma made it…
Palmer Luckey is on top of the world.
These days, the word drone is used to refer to just about any kind of remote-controlled, unmanned aircraft.
When I was 12, I invented a superhero named Boy Genius, a guy my age who awakens one morning with access to 100 percent of his brain power.
One of the largest treasure troves of astronomical data comes from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), an ongoing scan of the firmament that began 15 years ago.
Peter Thiel has been behind some prominent technologies: he cofounded PayPal and was an early investor in such companies as Facebook, LinkedIn, and Tesla Motors. But he’s convinced that technological progress has been stagnant…
Some people care a lot about the new iPhone, available in stores Friday. This is about people who don't.
Forget about the iPhone 6 Plus, Apple Pay and even the company's bold step into wearables.
Yes, you read the title of this column correctly.
Steve Jobs’s office remains Steve Jobs's office.
You may know Google Trends.
John Durant, director of the MIT Museum, and David Kaiser, director of MIT's Program in Science, Technology, and Society, discuss the best ways to get the general public interested in science.
It would be too much to say that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange feels optimistic.
While U.S. military leaders appeared before Congress to outline their strategy to fight Islamic State militants on the battlefield, the National Security Agency chief said on Tuesday he was watching the media-savvy group's cyber…
Lounging poolside in 93-degree July heat as Daft Punk's "Get Lucky" thrums through the patio speakers, Tony Fadell takes a sip of nonalcoholic beer and sinks far enough back into his chair that his belly peeks out from under…
Best-selling science-fiction writer Neal Stephenson's works cover everything from cryptography to Sumerian mythology.
During the last seismic Apple announcement, in 2010, I was at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco as Steve Jobs unveiled the iPad, a device he said was so singular it would create its own landing strip.
Have you ever loved a car? Maybe it was an old truck you drove for hundreds of thousands of miles, or maybe it was your very first car: where you had your very first beer and your very first kiss.
When Steve Jobs was running Apple, he was known to call journalists to either pat them on the back for a recent article or, more often than not, explain how they got it wrong.
In the recent discussion over the risks of developing superintelligent machines—that is, machines with general intelligence greater than that of humans—two narratives have emerged.
A fundamental quest of the digital age has been to make our devices more personal.