The Expeditions in Computing program provides scientists with the funding to work on ambitious, often multidisciplinary research.Gregory Goth From Communications of the ACM | November 1, 2009
Despite a number of challenges, patients' medical records are slowly making the transition to the digital age.Leah Hoffmann From Communications of the ACM | November 1, 2009
The technological challenge for researchers working on the next generation of electronic paper is to render color as brightly as traditional paper, without increasing...Kirk L. Kroeker From Communications of the ACM | November 1, 2009
Computer scientists have found a way to bootstrap science, using evolutionary computation to find fundamental meaning in massive amounts of raw data.Gary Anthes From Communications of the ACM | November 1, 2009
Supercomputers have long been an indispensable, albeit expensive, tool for researchers who need to make sense of vast amounts of data. One way that researchers...Scientific American From ACM News | October 19, 2009
The University of Science and Technology of China recently demonstrated a metropolitan quantum cryptography network (QCN) for use by the government in Wuhu, China...Science in China Press From ACM TechNews | October 19, 2009
Microsoft and researchers from the University of Konstanz in Germany are collaborating to create Videomap, navigation software that incorporates videos of driving...Technology Review From ACM TechNews | October 16, 2009
During ACM's recent Symposium on Operating Systems Principles, researchers from Carnegie Mellon University and Intel Labs Pittsburgh won the best paper award for...Carnegie Mellon News From ACM TechNews | October 16, 2009
The National Institute for Computational Sciences (NICS), a joint project between the University of Tennessee (UT) and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, has upgraded...National Institute for Computational Sciences From ACM TechNews | October 15, 2009
A recurring theme at Informatics Europe's recent European Computer Science Summit 2009, which took place Oct. 8-9 in Paris, was the concern that the European scientific...Computing Community Consortium From ACM TechNews | October 14, 2009
Despite the mainstreaming of multicore processors for desktops, not every desktop application can be rewritten for multicore frameworks, which means some bottlenecks...Computerworld From ACM TechNews | October 14, 2009
Auburn University researchers have developed a software filter that protects computers against distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks without bogging down...Network World From ACM TechNews | October 9, 2009
Automotive communications are a major element in the near future of vehicle technology, with applications ranging from variable road sign visualization, to accident... From ICT Results | October 9, 2009
Engineers at the University of California, Berkeley, have connected electrodes and radio antennas to the nervous systems of beetles and then were able to control...New Scientist From ACM TechNews | October 8, 2009
Software engineering techniques for very large data systems will be the focus of research at Queen's University in Canada, which has received a $5 million investment...Queen's niversity From ACM TechNews | October 6, 2009
After four decades, the Unix platform is still very important to enterprise information technology and has many years of usefulness left to it, even though Linux...InfoWorld From ACM TechNews | October 5, 2009
Researchers are relying on graphics processing units to help build a highly complex computer simulation depicting how chromatophore proteins create photosynthesis...Scientific American From ACM News | October 1, 2009
High-powered Internet applications typically need teams of experts to maintain them. Not any more, say European researchers who have built a system to create applications... From ICT Results | September 30, 2009
Satellites and other spacecraft typically use bulky and expensive shielding to protect vital microprocessors and other microelectronic integrated circuits from...Georgia Institute of Technology From ACM News | October 1, 2009
Computer researchers at the University of New South Wales and NICTA say they have proven that an operating-system kernel was 100 percent free of bugs. The team...niversity of New South Wales From ACM TechNews | September 30, 2009