Unused telecom fiber might be used to detect earthquakes, uncover other secrets in the soil.
Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | November 1, 2018
40 years ago, Whitfield Diffie and Martin E. Hellman introduced the public key cryptography used to secure today's online transactions.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | June 1, 2016
Michael Stonebraker didn't realize at the outset that it would take six years to create INGRES, one of the world's first relational databases.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | June 1, 2015
A growing number of tools and strategies are available to make computers and digital content accessible to people with disabilities.Neil Savage From ACM News | June 6, 2013
Computer models may help neurologists unlock the secrets of brain disorders, from Alzheimer's to cancer.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | March 1, 2013
Computational models are tackling the complexity of biology, from single-celled microbes to human organs.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | February 1, 2013
Side channels give out information that can be used to crack secrets, but researchers are identifying the holes and trying to close them.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | January 1, 2013
With the right approach, data mining can discover unexpected side effects and drug interactions.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | October 1, 2012
Computer scientists are teaching machines to run experiments, make inferences from the data, and use the results to conduct new experiments.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | May 1, 2012
Computers that tease out patterns from clinical data could improve patient diagnosis and care.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | January 1, 2012
Developing an IT ecosystem for health could improve — and transform — the practice of medicine.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | September 1, 2011
Researchers are mining Twitter's vast flow of data to measure public sentiment, follow political activity, and detect earthquakes and flu outbreaks.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | March 1, 2011
Purdue University's Science of Information Center seeks new principles to answer the question 'What is information?'Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | February 1, 2011
A better understanding of heavy-tailed probability distributions can improve activities from Internet commerce to the design of server farms.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | June 1, 2010