As the U.S. government draws up plans to use surveillance drones in domestic airspace, opposition to what many consider an unwarranted and significant invasionprivacy...Scientific American From ACM News | March 7, 2013
The number of smartphones, tablets and other network-connected gadgets will outnumber humans by the end of the year.Scientific American From ACM Opinion | February 19, 2013
Renowned physicist Stephen Hawking has long relied on technology to help him connect with the outside world despite the degenerative motor neuron disease he has...Scientific American From ACM Opinion | January 18, 2013
Anti-hacker defenses have long focused mainly on protecting personal computers and servers in homes and offices.Scientific American From ACM News | November 29, 2012
"Nothing quite like it exists yet, but we have begun building it," Henry Markram wrote in the June 2012 issue of Scientific American. He was referring to a "fantastic...Scientific American From ACM Opinion | November 16, 2012
A mining crew is trapped deep underground after a cave-in. Firefighters run into a smoke-spewing high-rise to battle a violent blaze. A team of soldiers breaches...Scientific American From ACM News | October 24, 2012
The 2012 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded jointly to Serge Haroche and David J. Wineland for experimental methods that enable measuring and manipulation of individual...Scientific American From ACM News | October 9, 2012
Imagine seeing life through one eyeball but then being given the ability to view the world through two or even three eyeballs at once.Scientific American From ACM News | October 4, 2012
Some people try to make the most of their spare time by exercising, volunteering, or simply recharging their batteries. Others like to use that time to build robots...Scientific American From ACM News | May 31, 2012
Much of Intel's success as a microprocessor manufacturer over the past four decades has come from the company's ability to understand and anticipate the future...Scientific American From ACM Opinion | May 15, 2012
Earlier this year Iran's defense minister put the world on notice: His nation had developed the ability to "easily" watch spacewalking astronauts from the ground...Scientific American From ACM News | May 1, 2012
Counterfeit electronics embedded in missile guidance systems and hundred-million-dollar aircraft have become a serious problem for the U.S. military and its contractors...Scientific American From ACM News | April 20, 2012
A heartbreaking, out-of-the-gate failure of Russia's sample return mission early this year created a wide circle of disappointment.Scientific American From ACM News | March 26, 2012
The quantum world and the everyday world of human experience are supposed to be two different realms. Quantum effects, as demonstrated in the lab, are usually confined...Scientific American From ACM News | March 13, 2012
The race to the $1,000 genome heated up today as Life Technologies, based in Carlsbad, Calif., announced it will debut a new sequencing machine this year that...Scientific American From ACM News | January 11, 2012
Soon after the ill-fated Phobos-Grunt spacecraft stalled in Earth orbit, a former Russian official implicated "powerful American radars" in Alaska. Is there a...Scientific American From ACM News | December 15, 2011
Most Americans who worry about cyberwarfare are concerned that it will be directed against the United States. But the truth is that cyber conflict is far more...Scientific American From ACM News | November 21, 2011