Tech Mainstays Promote Machines That Fix Themselves
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Technology companies are embracing self-healing technology, a computing strategy that could have a major impact on the data center and the desktop. IBM uses self-healing technologies in WebSphere, DB2, the Lotus Foundations product line, and its Power servers. And Sun Microsystems has designed predictive self-healing modules that enable Solaris to self-diagnose and mitigate problems.
Learning More About Active Learning
Active learning algorithms are producing substantial savings in label complexity over passive learning approaches.
With sentiment analysis algorithms, companies can identify and assess the wide variety of opinions found online and create computational models of human opinion.
Doctors are saving lives with virtual, 3D exams that are less invasive than a conventional optical colonoscopy.
A diverse, international group of more than 200 attendees met at the Rebooting Computing Summit to address the problems confronting computer science.
Experts warn the U.S. may soon relinquish its leadership role in IT research and development.
Advanced computational models are enabling researchers to create increasingly sophisticated prediction markets.
Researchers are turning to computers to help us take advantage of our own cognitive abilities and of the wisdom of crowds.
The Evolution of Virtualization
Virtualization is moving out of the data center and making inroads with mobile computing, security, and software delivery.
A Difficult, Unforgettable Idea
On the 40th anniversary of Douglas C. Engelbart's "The Mother of All Demos," computer scientists discuss the event's influence — and imagine what could have been.
Digital rights management (DRM) has emerged as a widespread tool to combat piracy. So far, however, DRM systems have proved highly inconvenient to consumers who wish to view or listen to content on multiple devices, including computers, media servers, set-top boxes, portable video and audio devices, even phones. They have also proved mostly ineffective in thwarting thieves.
ACM members have a professional duty to ensure that the public comprehends and benefits from advances in computing.
Researchers working in computational photography are using computer vision, computer graphics, and applied optics to bring a vast array of new capabilities to digital cameras.
Researchers are recognizing the potential of position sensors to help them overcome the limitations of traditional user interfaces.
Barack Obama's presidential campaign utilized the Internet and information technology unlike any previous political campaign. How politicians and the public interact will never be the same.
ACM's premier computer graphics conference hosts its first-ever graphics event in Asia, with a more global focus.
The Long Slow Road to a $1 Million Millennium Prize
In 2006, the journal Science named the solution to the century-old Poincaré Conjecture as its "breakthrough of the year." Three years later, the Clay Mathematics Institute, which had pledged to award $1 million to the person who solves this or any of six others of its Millennium Prize Problems, has yet to name a winner. The delay sheds light on the onerous process of vetting solutions to mathematics' toughest problems.
Climate researchers have no shortage of scientific issues on which to expend computer power. The biggest problem is choosing which one to tackle first.
Two virtual astronomical telescopes promise to transform the way people view and study the cosmos.
Future generations of smartphones will be context aware, tracking your behavior, providing information about the immediate environment, and anticipating your intentions.
Programmer Jean Bartik is inducted into the Computer History Museum's Hall of Fellows.
I would be hard-pressed to recall in my four decades as an ACM member a time as eventful and exceptional as recorded by ACM in FY08.
The sometimes contentious development of 64-bit systems shows how technology decisions can have unexpected, enduring consequences.
Shape the Future of Computing
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