There are few things in this world I despise more than software updates. Downloading hundreds of files, waiting for the progress bar to fill, restarting the device—it’s...Wired From ACM Opinion | October 27, 2011
The email went to Eric14. His real name is Eric Baldeschwieler, but no one calls him that. At fourteen letters, Baldeschwieler is a mouthful, and he works in... From ACM News | October 27, 2011
Plastic tanks and miniature models of fighter jets are on display in Steven Zaloga's home office, and his bookshelves are overflowing with volumes about the history...Der Spiegel From ACM News | October 26, 2011
Stanford University researchers have developed RAMCloud, a scalable, high performance storage approach that can store data in dynamic random access memory and aggregate...HPC Wire From ACM TechNews | October 26, 2011
Using carbon nanotubes bent to act as springs, Stanford researchers have developed a stretchable, transparent skin-like sensor that can be stretched to more than...Stanford University News From ACM News | October 26, 2011
John Rogers was in his lab at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign six years ago, testing new ways to make electronic circuits, when one of his team...Bloomberg Businessweek From ACM News | October 26, 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
Written off by some critics as a doomed dinosaur, stuck in the tar pit of a stalling personal computer market, Intel is headed for a colossal clash as it scrambles...San Jose Mercury News From ACM News | October 24, 2011
Researchers have discovered important security flaws in modern automobile systems. Will car thieves learn to pick locks with their laptops?Alex Wright From Communications of the ACM | November 1, 2011
Scientists say improvements to extreme-weather prediction are possible with new weather models and a reinvention of the modeling technologies used to process them...Kirk L. Kroeker From Communications of the ACM | November 1, 2011
Carnegie Mellon University researchers have developed TapSense, a system that combines a microphone with a touchscreen to distinguish the difference between the...Carnegie Mellon News From ACM TechNews | October 21, 2011
The U.S. intelligence community is studying how to tap the power of crowdsourcing through a multi-university effort. Associated Press From ACM TechNews | October 20, 2011
Kansas State University researchers are using a $700,000 U.S. National Science Foundation grant to upgrade its Beocat supercomputer, a cluster of servers that provides...Kansas State University News From ACM TechNews | October 20, 2011
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and Microsoft have developed OmniTouch, a wearable projection system that enables users to turn any object into a graphical...Carnegie Mellon University From ACM TechNews | October 19, 2011
Imperial College London researchers say they have developed a method for building logic gates out of bacteria and DNA, which makes them the most advanced biological...Imperial College London From ACM TechNews | October 19, 2011
Researchers at George Mason University, the U.S. National Security Agency, and Google have developed a hardened kernel for the Android 3.0 operating system that...Government Computer News From ACM TechNews | October 19, 2011
Northwestern University researchers have developed a nanomaterial that can guide electrical currents, which could lead to a computer that can redesign its internal...Northwestern University Newscenter From ACM TechNews | October 19, 2011
Researchers at the University of Washington have developed a proton-based transistor that might eventually enable machines to communicate with living things.Bob Violino From ACM News | October 19, 2011
The United States wants to achieve exaflop speeds for supercomputing, but China, the European Union, India, Japan, and Russia also have set their sights on exascale...The Financial Times From ACM TechNews | October 18, 2011
Table salt could be used to increase the capacity of hard drives from as much as 4 Tbytes today to more than 21 Tbytes, according to researchers at the Institute...Computerworld From ACM TechNews | October 18, 2011