Maybe it's your mom and/or dad. Maybe it's a sibling or a grandparent. Or maybe it's just that one friend who still uses a Motorola Razr from the early 2000s.Wired From ACM Opinion | November 27, 2013
For the first time in memory, adults in the United States under age forty are now expected to be poorer than their parents.Wired From ACM Opinion | November 25, 2013
A program to encourage and support girls and women in pursuing their computer science interests.
Wendy M. DuBow, Ruthe Farmer, Zhen Wu, Malia Fredrickson From Communications of the ACM | December 1, 2013
Design thinking is the newest fashion for finding better solutions to problems. Combining it with computational thinking offers some real possibilities for improving...Peter J. Denning From Communications of the ACM | December 1, 2013
On October 21, the Wikimedia Foundation issued a statement from Sue Gardner, our executive director, condemning the black hat practice of paid advocacy editing...Wikimedia Foundation From ACM Opinion | November 22, 2013
Both consumer electronics and apparel are notoriously difficult businesses competing in mature industries. Wearable technology—everything from activity trackers...Wired From ACM Opinion | November 20, 2013
Federal judge Denny Chin rejected a copyright challenge Google’s practices of scanning books into digital format and presenting snippets of those scans in search...Forbes From ACM Opinion | November 15, 2013
The internet backbone—the infrastructure of networks upon which internet traffic travels—went from being a passive infrastructure for communication to an active...Wired From ACM Opinion | November 14, 2013
Forget extra cupholders or power windows: the new Renault Zoe comes with a "feature" that absolutely nobody wants.Electronic Frontier Foundation From ACM Opinion | November 14, 2013
When users of Lavabit, an encrypted e-mail service, logged on to the site this past August, they found a bewildering letter on the site's main page.The New Yorker From ACM News | November 13, 2013
Excited teenagers—in other words normal teenagers—have never been famous for consistently wise decisions, nor should they be.New Scientist From ACM Opinion | November 13, 2013