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Remembering a Thinker Who Thought About Thinking
From ACM Opinion

Remembering a Thinker Who Thought About Thinking

The field of educational technology is mourning a visionary whose work was considered 50 years ahead of its time.

The World's Best Cyber Army Doesn't Belong to Russia
From ACM Opinion

The World's Best Cyber Army Doesn't Belong to Russia

National attention is focused on Russian eavesdroppers' possible targeting of U.S. presidential candidates and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.

The Lessons of the DNC Hack
From ACM Opinion

The Lessons of the DNC Hack

Just days after Robert Gates became secretary of defense in December 2006, in the middle of George W. Bush’s second term, he found himself so stunned by the volume...

Make Algorithms Accountable
From ACM Opinion

Make Algorithms Accountable

Algorithms are ubiquitous in our lives.

The Doom of Your Memories Doesn't Really Exist
From ACM Opinion

The Doom of Your Memories Doesn't Really Exist

If you played Doom during its heyday in the 90s, I have some disappointing news: it's not as frightening as you remember.

How Copyright Law Stifles Your Right to Tinker with Tech
From ACM Opinion

How Copyright Law Stifles Your Right to Tinker with Tech

The CEO of the gadget-repair site iFixit explains why tech groups are suing the U.S. government over the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

Wikileaks Has Officially Lost the Moral High Ground
From ACM Opinion

Wikileaks Has Officially Lost the Moral High Ground

What the heck is going on at WikiLeaks?

Dark Patterns Are Designed to Trick You (and They're All Over the Web)
From ACM Opinion

Dark Patterns Are Designed to Trick You (and They're All Over the Web)

It happens to the best of us. After looking closely at a bank statement or cable bill, suddenly a small, unrecognizable charge appears.

The Science That Fed Frankenstein
From ACM Opinion

The Science That Fed Frankenstein

In 1816, a teenager began to compose what many view as the first true work of science fiction—and unleashed one of the most subversive attacks on modern science...

Could Brain Training Prevent Dementia?
From ACM Opinion

Could Brain Training Prevent Dementia?

It's been a lousy couple of years for researchers who study the effects of computerized brain training.

Americans Are Wary About Body-Enhancement Technologies
From ACM Opinion

Americans Are Wary About Body-Enhancement Technologies

Emerging technologies that draw from biomedical technology, nanotechnology, information technology and other fields are developing at a rapid pace and may lead...

Teamwork in Computing Research
From Communications of the ACM

Teamwork in Computing Research

Considering the benefits and downsides of collaborative research.

Chilling the Messenger
From Communications of the ACM

Chilling the Messenger

Keeping ego out of software-design review.

From Computational Thinking to Computational Participation in K-12 Education
From Communications of the ACM

From Computational Thinking to Computational Participation in K-12 Education

Seeking to reframe computational thinking as computational participation.

Computer Security Is Broken
From Communications of the ACM

Computer Security Is Broken: Can Better Hardware Help Fix It?

Computer security problems have far exceeded the limits of the human brain. What can we do about it?

In China, a Robot's Place Is in the Kitchen
From ACM Opinion

In China, a Robot's Place Is in the Kitchen

Wang Peixin has seen the future, and he's sure it features robots serving up fried dumplings.

A Makeover For Stodgy Federal Agencies
From ACM Opinion

A Makeover For Stodgy Federal Agencies

Government needs to do away with out-of-date agencies and open ones with more relevance, like a Department of Tech Support.

America Wants to Believe China Can't Innovate. Tech Tells a Different Story.
From ACM Opinion

America Wants to Believe China Can't Innovate. Tech Tells a Different Story.

Silicon Valley may be powered by organic kale, but when Chinese tech gurus gather at 3W, a coffee shop-slash-incubator in the Chinese capital, they want sunflower...

Rise of the Ag-Bots Will Not Sow Seeds of ­nemployment
From ACM Opinion

Rise of the Ag-Bots Will Not Sow Seeds of ­nemployment

Larry Stap's fifth-generation family dairy farm has come a long way since his great grandfather established it in Lynden, Wash., in 1910.

How MIT Gave 'ghostbusters' Its 'geek Cred'
From ACM Opinion

How MIT Gave 'ghostbusters' Its 'geek Cred'

The energetic researchers who grounded the new "Ghostbusters" in hard science—giving it "geek cred"—are using a flurry of media attention to alter public perceptions...
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