College students around the world are "strikingly similar" in their addiction to their cellphones and need to be connected to social media like Facebook, MySpace...Digital Life Today From ACM News | April 8, 2011
Jean Jennings Bartik, one of the first computer programmers and a pioneering forerunner in a technology that came to be known as software, died on March 23. She...The New York Times From ACM News | April 8, 2011
The Pentagon has spent decades and gazillions of dollars trying to build the perfect translation device. Now, its far-out research arm is looking at a new direction...Wired From ACM News | April 7, 2011
A cyberwar scenario hypothesized by former U.S. State Department diplomat Christopher Bronk in a report published in the U.S. Air Force's Strategic Studies paints...Computerworld From ACM TechNews | April 7, 2011
Robots could fill the role of sorting through and categorizing discarded material from construction and demolition projects for recyclers as a result of the efforts...New Scientist From ACM TechNews | April 7, 2011
In preparation for National Robotics Week, an initiative of the Congressional Robotics Caucus, at the National Museum of American History, which kicks off on...The Atlantic From ACM News | April 7, 2011
Physicists at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory are planning to announce Wednesday that they have found a suspicious bump in their data that could be...The New York Times From ACM News | April 6, 2011
Network coding is an innovative new approach to network design that promises much more efficient use of bandwidth, and MIT researchers have made seminal contributions...MIT News Office From ACM News | April 6, 2011
Jack London was the subject in Daterrius Hamilton’s online English 3 course. In a high school classroom packed with computers, he read a brief biography of London...The New York Times From ACM News | April 6, 2011
In philosophy of mind, a "cerebroscope" is a fictitious device, a brain-computer interface in today's language, which reads out the content of somebody's brain...Scientific American From ACM News | April 6, 2011
Zdenek Kalal’s Predator object-tracking software is almost uncanny. Show anything to its all-seeing camera eye, and it will quickly learn to recognize it and...Wired From ACM News | April 5, 2011
Northwestern University researchers have developed software that analyzes how natural disasters and political upheaval affect the Internet. Northwestern niversity News Center From ACM TechNews | April 5, 2011
University of North Carolina researchers have developed software that can create 3D models of landmarks and geographical locations using 2D photos from online photo...Reesenews From ACM TechNews | April 5, 2011
The University of Utah ranks first in the U.S. in terms of creating startups based upon campus research. Here are four reasons for its great success. Dennis McCafferty From ACM News | April 5, 2011
Google is synonymous with "search engine," and now, for students, it wants to be synonymous with "science."The New York Times From ACM News | April 5, 2011
Google has made a $900m bid for the patent portfolio of Nortel Networks, the bankrupt Canadian telecom equipment maker. The patents could help arm it against...BBC News From ACM News | April 5, 2011
In the 10 years since the last time Larry Page was Google's chief executive, the company has changed a bit. It has gone from an ambitious startup to a publicly...The Guardian From ACM Opinion | April 4, 2011
It looks like a giant potato in space. And yet, the information in this model is the sharpest view we have of how gravity varies across the Earth.BBC News From ACM News | April 4, 2011
Is the tantalizing dream of a universal library dead? Some scholars and librarians across the country fear it may be, now that a federal judge in New York has...The New York Times From ACM News | April 4, 2011
Google is working on a mobile application that would allow users to snap pictures of people's faces in order to access their personal information, a director...CNN From ACM News | April 1, 2011