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An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


Sony Says 535,000 Vaio Laptops at Risk of Overheating
From ACM News

Sony Says 535,000 Vaio Laptops at Risk of Overheating

More than half a million Sony Vaio F and C series laptops sold this year contain a software bug that could lead them to overheat, the company said. A bug in the...

Computer Modeling to Build Better Mud Bricks
From ACM News

Computer Modeling to Build Better Mud Bricks

University of Illinois at Chicago assistant professor Craig Foster received a U.S. National Science Foundation grant to create computer models that analyze physical...

Pentagon
From ACM News

Pentagon

Even for the Pentagon’s science-fiction division, it seemed like a stretch. But in 2007, Darpa really did launch an effort to build programmable matter that could...

Supreme Court: 'business Method' and Software Patents Ok
From ACM News

Supreme Court: 'business Method' and Software Patents Ok

This morning, the Supreme Court decided the long-running Bilski case on business method patents--a case with broad applicability to software patents. As expected...

Researchers Collaborate on Project to Integrate 'Cloud Computing' With 'Grid' Technologies
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Collaborate on Project to Integrate 'Cloud Computing' With 'Grid' Technologies

European researchers working on the StratusLab project are developing software designed to improve distributed computing infrastructures in an effort to enable...

An Internet 100 Times As Fast
From ACM News

An Internet 100 Times As Fast

A new network design that avoids the need to convert optical signals into electrical ones could boost capacity while reducing power consumption.

Smart Computer Learns From Video
From ACM TechNews

Smart Computer Learns From Video

ETH Zurich researchers have developed a learning program that can analyze street scenes from video, map the patterns that characterize the various road users, and...

From ACM TechNews

Algorithms Aid Prosthetics Development

Advanced algorithms could help make the speed and accuracy of clinically viable prosthetic devices more comparable to a healthy human arm. 

From ACM TechNews

U.K. Researchers Building 'Fat-Free' Cloud Programming Framework

Researchers at Citrix and the universities of Cambridge and Nottingham have developed Mirage, a programming framework aimed at supporting applications that run...

How a Computer Program Became Classical Music's Hot, New Composer
From ACM TechNews

How a Computer Program Became Classical Music's Hot, New Composer

University of California, Santa Cruz professor David Cope has developed Emily Howell, a music-composing program that generates its own compositions by following...

'augmented Reality' on Smartphones Brings Teaching Down to Earth
From ACM TechNews

'augmented Reality' on Smartphones Brings Teaching Down to Earth

University of Wisconsin at Madison researchers are developing an open source tool that lets designers link text, images, video, and audio into a physical location...

Toward the Semantic Web
From ACM TechNews

Toward the Semantic Web

The World Wide Web Consortium recently published the Rule Interchange Format, a new standard that should help bring the idea of the Semantic Web closer to reality...

From ACM TechNews

How Html5 Will Change the Web

The implementation of HTML5 will remake the Internet and enable basic Web sites to do much more, from tracking a user's location to storing more data in the cloud...

­sing Science Against Suicide Bombs
From ACM TechNews

­sing Science Against Suicide Bombs

Software that models the effects of suicide bombings has been developed by computer scientist Zeeshan-ul-Hassan Usmani, whose expertise could help inform the construction...

Blogs and Tweets Could Predict the Future
From ACM TechNews

Blogs and Tweets Could Predict the Future

Forecasts about social and economic trends could be generated through the analysis of blogs and tweets, building on earlier research by Google and others to mine...

Trumping the Trumpets: How Audio Engineering Helps Tone Down Vuvuzela Disruption
From ACM TechNews

Trumping the Trumpets: How Audio Engineering Helps Tone Down Vuvuzela Disruption

A new filter will enable soccer fans watching the 2010 World Cup online to remove the sounds of vuvuzelas playing in South Africa's stadiums. 

Mainstreaming Augmented Reality
From Communications of the ACM

Mainstreaming Augmented Reality

Advancements in computer vision, object recognition, and related technologies are leading to new levels of sophistication in augmented-reality applications and...

Sharing Computational Perspectives
From Communications of the ACM

Sharing Computational Perspectives

Computer scientists are now making intellectual contributions to a wide range of other disciplines, including evolutionary theory, physics, and economics.

From ACM News

Microsoft's Kinect Isn't Just For Games

Microsoft's long-awaited body-sensing technology, Project Natal, got a new name last week at the E3 expo in Los Angeles. Kinect, as it is now called, is a set-top...

From ACM TechNews

The A-Z of Programming Languages: Objective-C

Brad Cox, creator of the Objective-C programming language, says he co-developed the language with partner Tom Love as a reaction to the C language and its limitations...
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