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D-Wave and IBM offer access to supercomputing quantum computers in the cloud.
New hardware, services are aimed at identifying malware before it has the chance to execute.
Apprenticeship Emerging To Fill Skills Gaps
New approaches to apprenticeship aim to provide talented, if not traditionally trained, computing professionals.
Implantable wireless monitors give researchers a new look inside the human body.
Artists can use software to create art, and some software creates art all on its own.
2002 ACM Turing laureate Len Adleman, 2014 ACM Prize in Computing recipient Dan Boneh, 2015 ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award recipient Brent Waters, and ACM Fellows Patrick McDaniel and Paul Van Oorschot discuss current issues in cybersecurity.
Hyper-Converged Infrastructure
An out-of-the-box solution to infrastructure is drawing increasing attention.
Software Synthesis Learns By Example
Neural networks will assist, rather than replace, human programmers.
In Black Box Algorithms We Trust (or Do We?)
Some issues that arise from the use of algorithms may be due to the data they are fed, rather than their black-box nature.
Taking the first steps toward building a long-range network that can connect super-fast quantum computers, or provide absolutely secure, tamper-free communication.
Thinking Deeply to Make Better Speech
More work is needed to make synthesized speech more natural, easier to understand, and more pleasant to hear.
Cryptocurrencies are enabling illegal or immoral transactions in the dark corners of the Internet.
ACM has recognized 53 of its members as ACM Fellows for major contributions in areas including artificial intelligence, cryptography, computer architecture, high performance computing, and programming languages.
Researchers are looking for new ways to advance semiconductors as Moore's Law approaches its limits.
Smart Cities Begin To Face Security Concerns
"The attack surface is growing faster than the protections."
Neuroscience Misses the Meaning
Examining each transistor in a microprocessor using techniques for analyzing how the human brain works did not yield anticipated understanding.
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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