Stretchable Electronics to Top $1 Billion By 2030
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A growing variety of stretchable polymers will help integrate electronics into medical implants, consumer products, and more.
Researchers are working to project an image directly into one's brain, completely bypassing the eyes.
A Summer Away From the Keyboard
Three computer science students explain the pros and cons of spending their summer away from coding.
E-Commerce Supports Data-Driven Economic Development
The integration of "pure play" e-commerce and brick-and-mortar goods and services is accelerating.
Bioprinting has generated bones, cartilage, and some muscles; hearts and livers are still years away.
Off-the-shelf computer components were hardened to the extremes of space with layers of "detection, correction, and protection."
Electronic eavesdropping is becoming ever more nefarious in the age of smartphones and digital devices.
Will Quantum Computers Surpass Encryption?
The fundamentally different paradigm of quantum computation will require fundamentally different security.
The Effectiveness of Coding Camps
Do coding schools really get you working faster, with better pay, than college computer science courses?
Researchers are turning to artificial intelligence to gain insights into factors that lead to poverty and other social problems.
Image recognition technology is advancing rapidly. Researchers are discovering new ways to tackle the task without enormous datasets.
An engineer best known for his work in database management systems, and in techniques of layered architecture that include Bachman diagrams.
Scientists are demonstrating that lasers could be the future of space communication.
Turing Laureates Celebrate Award’s 50th Anniversary
ACM recently held a conference in celebration of the first 50 years of the ACM A.M. Turing Award.
Why GPS Spoofing Is a Threat to Companies, Countries
Technology that falsifies navigation data presents significant dangers to public and private organizations.
Computational math and biology yield sophisticated guidance for public health officials.
Not only that, facial recognition technologies inform him of who you are and what you did.
Artificial intelligence promises to change aspects of music ranging from rock concerts to advertising jingles.
Battery-Free Cellphones on the Horizon
Backscattering could eventually harness sufficient energy to power small devices.
With its "unique capabilities," virtual "James" is designed to interact with people regarding the delivery of a service.
Teaching Computational Thinking Sooner
Are there benefits to teaching computational thinking to preschoolers?
Shape the Future of Computing
ACM encourages its members to take a direct hand in shaping the future of the association. There are more ways than ever to get involved.
Get InvolvedCommunications of the ACM (CACM) is now a fully Open Access publication.
By opening CACM to the world, we hope to increase engagement among the broader computer science community and encourage non-members to discover the rich resources ACM has to offer.
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