Battelle researchers at the U.S. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have developed Anomalator, analytical software designed to recognize anomalous information...Pacific Northwest National Laboratory From ACM TechNews | October 28, 2011
Edmund Seto, a researcher at the University of California, Davis, develops censor and cell phone technologies to connect people to relevant, real-time data about...CITRIS Newsletter From ACM TechNews | October 28, 2011
From his 24th-floor corner office in midtown Manhattan, the veteran CBS research chief David Poltrack can gaze southward down the Avenue of the Americas, its...Technology Review 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
Jaden Lender, 3, sings along softly with the "Five Little Monkeys" app on the family iPad, and waggles his index finger along with the monkey doctor at the warning...The New York Times From ACM News | October 26, 2011
As protests against financial power sweep the world, science may have confirmed the protesters' worst fears. An analysis of the relationships between 43,000 transnational...New Scientist From ACM News | October 25, 2011
When IBM's Deep Blue supercomputer won its famous chess rematch with then world champion Garry Kasparov in May 1997, the victory was hailed far and wide as a...Wired From ACM News | October 25, 2011
The Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) was signed into law on October 21, 1986. Although it was forward-looking at the time, ECPA's privacy protections...Arstechnica From ACM Opinion | October 24, 2011
U.S. lawmakers are working toward bipartisan legislation that would offer expedited visas to foreign graduates with advanced technical degrees, amid complaints...Wall Street Journal From ACM TechNews | October 24, 2011
A recent National Science Foundation study found that minority doctoral holders are still poorly represented as faculty members at U.S. institutions, even as the...Diverse: Issues in Higher Education From ACM TechNews | October 24, 2011
Governments, companies, and individuals have suffered an unusual number of highly publicized data breaches this year. Is there a solution?Leah Hoffmann From Communications of the ACM | November 1, 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
Paul Allen and a colleague recently challenged inventor and author Ray Kurzweil's prediction that computers will soon surpass human intelligence, an event known...Technology Review From ACM TechNews | October 21, 2011
Science and engineering graduates are in high demand in a wide variety of fields, and many English-speaking science graduates are taking jobs in nonscience fields...Chronicle of Higher Education From ACM TechNews | October 21, 2011
The Supreme Court of Canada has erected a shield to protect those who post Internet links to defamatory sites.The Globe and Mail From ACM News | October 21, 2011
What is Duqu? Duqu (pronounced dyu kyu) is primarily a remote-access Trojan targeted at a limited number of organizations in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East...Network World From ACM News | October 21, 2011
In his last years, Steven P. Jobs veered from exotic diets to cutting-edge treatments as he fought the cancer that ultimately took his life, according to a new...The New York Times From ACM News | October 21, 2011
About 300,000 students have registered for Stanford University's first set of comprehensive, free online computer science courses, which include courses in databases...Stanford niversity From ACM TechNews | October 20, 2011