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Friday, August 15, 2014

ScienceDaily: Computers and Internet News

ScienceDaily: Computers and Internet News


New tool makes a single picture worth far more than a thousand words

Posted: 14 Aug 2014 04:23 PM PDT

A photo is worth a thousand words, but what if the image could also represent thousands of other images? New software seeks to tame the sea of visual data in the world by generating a single photo that can represent massive clusters of images.

Molecular engineers record an electron's quantum behavior

Posted: 14 Aug 2014 04:21 PM PDT

Scientists have developed a technique to record the quantum mechanical behavior of an individual electron contained within a nanoscale defect in diamond. Their technique uses ultrafast pulses of laser light both to control the defect's entire quantum state and observe how that single electron state changes over time.

Earlier diagnosis, treatment of mental illness? Genetic computer network inference model

Posted: 13 Aug 2014 02:44 PM PDT

A computer science and engineering associate professor and her doctoral student graduate are using a genetic computer network inference model that eventually could predict whether a person will suffer from bipolar disorder, schizophrenia or another mental illness.

Can our computers continue to get smaller and more powerful?

Posted: 13 Aug 2014 02:44 PM PDT

From their origins in the 1940s as sequestered, room-sized machines designed for military and scientific use, computers have made a rapid march into the mainstream, radically transforming industry, commerce, entertainment and governance while shrinking to become ubiquitous handheld portals to the world. But with miniature computer processors now containing millions of closely-packed transistor components of near atomic size, chip designers are facing both engineering and fundamental limits that have become barriers to the continued improvement of computer performance.

Realistic computer graphics: Technology from Germany makes it to Walt Disney

Posted: 12 Aug 2014 09:18 AM PDT

Creating a realistic computer simulation of how light suffuses a room is crucial not just for animated movies like "Toy Story" or "Cars". Special computing methods should ensure this, but they require great effort. Computer scientists have now developed a novel approach that turned out to be highly promising.

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