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https://www.facebook.com/oliver.briscoe2 https://twitter.com/oliver_briscoe https://www.linkedin.com/in/oliverbriscoe/ Blogs: https://OliverBriscoeOracle.tumblr.com http://OliverBriscoeOracle.wordpress.com http://OliverBriscoeOracle.weebly.com Sites: http://Oliver-Briscoe.com http://oliverbriscoe.com http://AboutOliverBriscoe.com http://OliverBriscoeInfo.com Although the term “quantum computer” might suggest a miniature, sleek device, the latest incarnations are a far cry from anything available in the Apple Store. In a laboratory just 60 kilometers north of New York City, scientists are running a fledgling quantum computer through its paces — and the whole package looks like something that might be found in a dark corner of a basement. The cooling system that envelops the computer is about the size and shape of a household water heater.
Beneath that clunky exterior sits the heart of the computer, the quantum processor, a tiny, precisely engineered chip about a centimeter on each side. Chilled to temperatures just above absolute zero, the computer — made by IBM and housed at the company’s Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, N.Y. — comprises 16 quantum bits, or qubits, enough for only simple calculations. If this computer can be scaled up, though, it could transcend current limits of computation. Computers based on the physics of the supersmall can solve puzzles no other computer can — at least in theory — because quantum entities behave unlike anything in a larger realm. Read Article: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/quantum-computers-are-about-get-real Possibly the strongest hybrid silk fibers yet have been created by scientists using all renewable resources. Combining spider silk proteins with nanocellulose from wood, the process offers a low-cost and scalable way to make bioactive materials for a wide range of medical uses.
Read Article: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/05/170517120737.htm |
About Oliver Briscoe
Oliver Briscoe is a 20+ year veteran of the Informational Technology field. He understands his first principals and loves teaching others. Archives
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