Twenty-five years ago U.S.-led Coalition forces launched the world’s first "space war" when they drove Iraqi troops out of Kuwait.Scientific American From ACM News | February 8, 2016
On a dark stretch of the chilly Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko the lander Philae has begun a lonely and silent vigil.Scientific American From ACM News | February 2, 2016
Understanding how brains work is one of the greatest scientific challenges of our times, but despite the impression sometimes given in the popular press, researchers...Scientific American From ACM News | February 2, 2016
Forensic probes of cyberattacks can uncover their modus operandi and severity, but finding perpetrators is a difficult proposition. Scientific American From ACM TechNews | January 29, 2016
It must be difficult for the roughly half a billion people who visit Wikipedia every month to remember a world without the free online encyclopedia.Scientific American From ACM Opinion | January 15, 2016
Anyone who has struggled to pinpoint his or her location in a mall, airport or urban canyon amid skyscrapers has experienced a GPS gap firsthand.Scientific American From ACM News | December 28, 2015
"Today we sense we are close to be being able to alter human heredity," Nobel Laureate and California Institute of Technology virologist David Baltimore said December...Scientific American From ACM News | December 3, 2015
After more than a year of bickering, stalling and revising, the Senate passed its most significant cybersecurity bill to date 74–21.Scientific American From ACM News | October 29, 2015
NASA scientists announced today the best evidence yet that Mars, once thought dry, sterile and dead, may yet have life in it: Liquid water still flows on at least...Scientific American From ACM Opinion | September 29, 2015
Advanced prosthetics have for the past few years begun tapping into brain signals to provide amputees with impressive new levels of control.Scientific American From ACM News | September 18, 2015
I grew up in a tiny New York City apartment, packed in alongside our four cats and my father's immense personal library of some 3000 books.Scientific American From ACM Opinion | September 10, 2015
It is an inevitability that cryptographers dread: the arrival of powerful quantum computers that can break the security of the Internet. Although these devices...Scientific American From ACM News | September 9, 2015
Researchers are using the metaphor of Twitter to help them better understand the ways communication among bacteria can lead to antibiotic resistance. Scientific American From ACM TechNews | September 2, 2015
Mobile devices have become incredibly popular for their ability to weave modern conveniences such as Internet access and social networking into the fabric of daily...Scientific American From ACM News | August 5, 2015
There is a gaping hole in the latest effort to reinvigorate the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI), one so big it could hold an estimated 357 million...Scientific American From ACM News | July 31, 2015
Exploring how much information the Earth can store offers insights into the manifestation of order in the universe.Scientific American From ACM TechNews | July 27, 2015
The most secure computers in the world can't "Google" a thing—they are disconnected from the Internet and all other networks.Scientific American From ACM News | June 29, 2015
Given the amount of mobile phone traffic that cell phone towers transmit, it is no wonder law enforcement agencies target these devices as a rich source of data...Scientific American From ACM Opinion | June 25, 2015