By knitting together multiple components and data streams, multimodal AI offers the promise of smarter, more human-like systems…
From ACM NewsSamuel Greengard| December 7, 2023
An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.
A self-guiding bullet that can steer itself towards its target is being developed for use by the U.S. military.BBC News From ACM News | February 2, 2012
An organization of computer hackers is planning to launch its own communication satellites and bypass satellites controlled by governmental bodies and used to censor...BBC News From ACM TechNews | January 4, 2012
Self-repairing electronic chips are one step closer, according to a team of U.S. researchers, creating a circuit that heals itself when cracked thanks to the...BBC News From ACM News | December 27, 2011
The intellectual rights relate to a method to switch a vehicle from a human-controlled mode into the state where it takes charge of the wheel.BBC News From ACM News | December 20, 2011
An American surveillance drone has been captured and filmed in Iran, where experts are apparently examining it.BBC News From ACM News | December 14, 2011
"If popular culture has taught us anything, it is that someday mankind must face and destroy the growing robot menace." Author and robotic engineer Daniel H Wilson's...BBC News From ACM News | November 22, 2011
Intel has developed an accelerator chip capable of running at speeds of one teraflops, equal to one trillion calculations per second.BBC News From ACM News | November 18, 2011
Future microchips may have only one type of component, capable of rewiring itself to do different jobs. Researchers from Northwestern University in the U.S. have...BBC News From ACM News | October 26, 2011
"I'll be back" said Arnold Schwarzenegger as cyborg-assassin the Terminator, back from the year 2029 to carry out a murder in 1984. But it seems that, when it...BBC News From ACM News | October 19, 2011
Robots are about to invade our lives. From performing household chores, to entertaining and educating our children, to looking after the elderly, roboticists...BBC News From ACM News | October 3, 2011
Scientists from the University of Bologna in Italy have developed software that lets cars "communicate" with one another on the road.BBC News From ACM News | July 14, 2011
Graphene is a "wonder material" waiting to happen. Since this super-conductive form of carbon, made from single-atom-thick sheets, was first produced in 2004,...BBC News From ACM News | June 30, 2011
The National Museum of Computing has finished restoring a Tunny machine—a key part of Allied code-cracking during World War II.BBC News From ACM News | May 27, 2011
The material graphene was touted as "the next big thing" even before its pioneers were handed the Nobel Prize last year. Many believe it could spell the end for...BBC News From ACM News | May 24, 2011
A circuit component touted as the "missing link" of electronics is starting to give up the secrets of how it works.BBC News From ACM News | May 17, 2011
Ted Hoff saved his own life, sort of. Deep inside this 73-year-old lies a microprocessor—a tiny computer that controls his pacemaker and, in turn, his heart.BBC News From ACM News | May 12, 2011
Helmet-mounted cameras mean live video can be sent direct from the front line back to headquarters. This technology enabled military and intelligence chiefs to...BBC News From ACM News | May 4, 2011
The walking patterns of crabs, lobsters and spiders are helping to inspire new ways of getting robots to move around.BBC News From ACM News | March 29, 2011
One of the most complex efforts toward a quantum computer has been shown off at the American Physical Society meeting in Dallas in the U.S. It uses the strange...BBC News From ACM News | March 22, 2011
An international group of scientists are aiming to create a simulator that can replicate everything happening on Earth—from global weather patterns and the spread...BBC News From ACM News | December 30, 2010