A new online system could make it easier for Australia to identify invasive fire ants, which were accidentally imported into the country two decades ago. New Scientist From ACM TechNews | March 30, 2011
As telepresence robots begin to appear in more and more offices and factories, they are poised to transform the way we work and interact with our colleagues.New Scientist From ACM News | March 28, 2011
Three socialbots recently integrated themselves into a group of Twitter users, gained 250 followers, and received 240 responses to the tweets they sent over a two...New Scientist From ACM TechNews | March 25, 2011
In A bar in Maastricht University in the Netherlands, 12 students are each given an envelope marked "Top Secret." Inside are plans for a terror attack somewhere...New Scientist From ACM News | March 15, 2011
Signals from GPS satellites now help you to call your mother, power your home, and even land your plane – but a cheap plastic box can jam it all.New Scientist From ACM News | March 10, 2011
A sporting miscarriage of justice that occurred last summer triggered a series of experiments that could this weekend see soccer (that's football to the rest...New Scientist From ACM News | March 4, 2011
Picture the scene: armed police officers are warned on their radios that a suspected male terrorist has been tracked to a crowded football stadium.New Scientist From ACM News | February 24, 2011
A medical robot; a Google-killer; a financial advisor; a tool for trawling legal documents; an aide for the intelligence services. These are just some of the...New Scientist From ACM News | February 15, 2011
A competition to find a replacement for one of the gold-standard computer security algorithms used in almost all secure, online transactions just heated up.New Scientist From ACM News | December 15, 2010
Oak Ridge National Laboratory researchers are using the Jaguar supercomputer to analyze Internet traffic, looking for clues that will lead law enforcement officers...New Scientist From ACM TechNews | December 8, 2010
The University of Bristol's Ravi Vaidyanathan is leading a research effort to develop an in-ear device that would enable people to control a wheelchair by clicking...New Scientist From ACM TechNews | December 6, 2010
Researchers at the University of Southern California are developing realistic, immersive virtual-reality programs for the U.S. military in which the soldiers are...New Scientist From ACM TechNews | November 15, 2010
Your cellphone could be a key tool in the fight against disease by relaying a telltale signature of illness to doctors and agencies monitoring new outbreaks.New Scientist From ACM News | October 15, 2010
Isaac Asimov would probably have been horrified at the experiments under way in a robotics lab in Slovenia. There, a powerful robot has been hitting people over...New Scientist From ACM News | October 14, 2010
The planned city of PlanIT Valley in northern Portugal is aiming to be an environmentally sustainable city. And, like an organism, it will have a brain: a central...New Scientist From ACM News | October 13, 2010
Stuxnet is the first worm of its type capable of attacking critical infrastructure like power stations and electricity grids: those in the know have been expecting...New Scientist From ACM News | September 28, 2010
Previously reluctant to patent the inventions, the CERN particle physics laboratory recently struck a deal with the World Intellectual Property Organization to...New Scientist From ACM TechNews | September 14, 2010
You might imagine that vast patent royalties flow into the organisation that invented the touchscreen and the World Wide Web. But the atom-smashing outfit CERN...New Scientist From ACM News | September 7, 2010