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IBM Q

Quantum Computing

MIT Technology Review Innovation Leaders Summit

Palais Brongniard

30 Novembre 2018

IBM Q

Quantum Computing

MIT Technology Review Innovation Leaders Summit

Palais Brongniard

30 Novembre 2018

Yesterday the Riva team attended the TED@IBM event in San Francisco. And was it ever cool!

 

IBM executives, business partners, and customers filled every last seat of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. There was food and drink, 15 TED Talk presenters, and a wonderful live band. We have never been to an event where the subject matter is so diverse.

 

We got to hear Chieko Asakawa challenge thinking on visually impaired technology usage. (Chieko is a leader in advancing web usability including digital Braille and voice browsers. Japan awarded Chieko the 2013 Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon for her contributions to accessibility research.)

 

Nir Eyal, who teaches at the Stanford GSB, shared how companies create habit-forming technology.

 

Aaron Horowitz shared how he developed Jerry the Bear to help kids with diabetes combine play with health education. (Aaron holds a degree in mechatronics and user interaction design from Northwestern. He serves on Design for America's advisory board.)

 

Kala Fleming, a scientist and thought leader on water management, discussed projects she is working on in Africa on smarter planet solutions for water, agriculture, and healthcare.

 

And the list continues...

 

We came away feeling inspired and empowered to identify problems worth solving – and to marshall the team, resources, and commitment to make a difference.

 

If you get a chance to attend one of these live TED events, we highly recommend it. A warm thank-you to our friends at IBM for inviting us.

IBM Q

Quantum Computing

MIT Technology Review Innovation Leaders Summit

Palais Brongniard

30 Novembre 2018

IBM Q

Quantum Computing

MIT Technology Review Innovation Leaders Summit

Palais Brongniard

30 Novembre 2018

IBM Q

Quantum Computing

MIT Technology Review Innovation Leaders Summit

Palais Brongniard

30 Novembre 2018

Bill Wootters, Wilson da Silva (host), Anne Broadbent and Stuart Wolf come together to discuss quantum computing in the first of our Science in the Pub Sessions at the Quantum to Cosmos Festival in Waterloo, Ontario.

 

Find out more at www.q2cfestival.com where you can also download the podcasts for these sessions.

Barry Sanders spoke about quantum computers and how they will be able to crack any current encryption system used for the secure exchange of data.

 

The April 24, 2012 Science Café staged by TELUS Spark focused on "Hacking and Cracking: How Safe Are You and Your Computer Systems?"

 

Drs. Barry Sanders, iCORE Chair of Quantum Information Science at the U of C, and Tom Keenan from the U of C's Faculty of Environmental Design, spoke to the issue of computer data security, the privacy of individual data, and the prospect of quantum computers revolutionizing the future of computing and security. Moderator for the evening was Ben Reed, Director of Calgary's Protospace, a home for hackers and computer innovators. The Ironwood Stage and Grill in Inglewood was again packed with a capacity crowd of 140 for the 2-hour Café.

Ben Reed of Calgary's Protospace chaired the discussion of computer security.

 

The April 24, 2012 Science Café staged by TELUS Spark focused on "Hacking and Cracking: How Safe Are You and Your Computer Systems?"

 

Drs. Barry Sanders, iCORE Chair of Quantum Information Science at the U of C, and Tom Keenan from the U of C's Faculty of Environmental Design, spoke to the issue of computer data security, the privacy of individual data, and the prospect of quantum computers revolutionizing the future of computing and security. Moderator for the evening was Ben Reed, Director of Calgary's Protospace, a home for hackers and computer innovators. The Ironwood Stage and Grill in Inglewood was again packed with a capacity crowd of 140 for the 2-hour Café.

Yesterday the Riva team attended the TED@IBM event in San Francisco. And was it ever cool!

 

IBM executives, business partners, and customers filled every last seat of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. There was food and drink, 15 TED Talk presenters, and a wonderful live band. We have never been to an event where the subject matter is so diverse.

 

We got to hear Chieko Asakawa challenge thinking on visually impaired technology usage. (Chieko is a leader in advancing web usability including digital Braille and voice browsers. Japan awarded Chieko the 2013 Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon for her contributions to accessibility research.)

 

Nir Eyal, who teaches at the Stanford GSB, shared how companies create habit-forming technology.

 

Aaron Horowitz shared how he developed Jerry the Bear to help kids with diabetes combine play with health education. (Aaron holds a degree in mechatronics and user interaction design from Northwestern. He serves on Design for America's advisory board.)

 

Kala Fleming, a scientist and thought leader on water management, discussed projects she is working on in Africa on smarter planet solutions for water, agriculture, and healthcare.

 

And the list continues...

 

We came away feeling inspired and empowered to identify problems worth solving – and to marshall the team, resources, and commitment to make a difference.

 

If you get a chance to attend one of these live TED events, we highly recommend it. A warm thank-you to our friends at IBM for inviting us.

The audience, of people of all ages, had lots of questions about computer security. The Q&A went for well over an hour.

 

The April 24, 2012 Science Café staged by TELUS Spark focused on "Hacking and Cracking: How Safe Are You and Your Computer Systems?"

 

Drs. Barry Sanders, iCORE Chair of Quantum Information Science at the U of C, and Tom Keenan from the U of C's Faculty of Environmental Design, spoke to the issue of computer data security, the privacy of individual data, and the prospect of quantum computers revolutionizing the future of computing and security. Moderator for the evening was Ben Reed, Director of Calgary's Protospace, a home for hackers and computer innovators. The Ironwood Stage and Grill in Inglewood was again packed with a capacity crowd of 140 for the 2-hour Café.

Tom Keenan spoke about the Black Hat and DefCon hacker conferences he has attended,

 

The April 24, 2012 Science Café staged by TELUS Spark focused on "Hacking and Cracking: How Safe Are You and Your Computer Systems?"

 

Drs. Barry Sanders, iCORE Chair of Quantum Information Science at the U of C, and Tom Keenan from the U of C's Faculty of Environmental Design, spoke to the issue of computer data security, the privacy of individual data, and the prospect of quantum computers revolutionizing the future of computing and security. Moderator for the evening was Ben Reed, Director of Calgary's Protospace, a home for hackers and computer innovators. The Ironwood Stage and Grill in Inglewood was again packed with a capacity crowd of 140 for the 2-hour Café.

Tom Keenan spoke to the security of your private data and what social media companies do with the information you choose to share.

 

The April 24, 2012 Science Café staged by TELUS Spark focused on "Hacking and Cracking: How Safe Are You and Your Computer Systems?"

 

Drs. Barry Sanders, iCORE Chair of Quantum Information Science at the U of C, and Tom Keenan from the U of C's Faculty of Environmental Design, spoke to the issue of computer data security, the privacy of individual data, and the prospect of quantum computers revolutionizing the future of computing and security. Moderator for the evening was Ben Reed, Director of Calgary's Protospace, a home for hackers and computer innovators. The Ironwood Stage and Grill in Inglewood was again packed with a capacity crowd of 140 for the 2-hour Café.

IBM Q

Quantum Computing

MIT Technology Review Innovation Leaders Summit

Palais Brongniard

30 Novembre 2018

Barry Sanders spoke about the research being done at the U of C on developing quantum computers and quantum cryptography techniques.

 

The April 24, 2012 Science Café staged by TELUS Spark focused on "Hacking and Cracking: How Safe Are You and Your Computer Systems?"

 

Drs. Barry Sanders, iCORE Chair of Quantum Information Science at the U of C, and Tom Keenan from the U of C's Faculty of Environmental Design, spoke to the issue of computer data security, the privacy of individual data, and the prospect of quantum computers revolutionizing the future of computing and security. Moderator for the evening was Ben Reed, Director of Calgary's Protospace, a home for hackers and computer innovators. The Ironwood Stage and Grill in Inglewood was again packed with a capacity crowd of 140 for the 2-hour Café.

Ben Reed, Tom Keenan, and Barry Sanders presented an entertaining and thought-provoking Cafe on the security of your personal information on the internet.

 

The April 24, 2012 Science Café staged by TELUS Spark focused on "Hacking and Cracking: How Safe Are You and Your Computer Systems?"

 

Drs. Barry Sanders, iCORE Chair of Quantum Information Science at the U of C, and Tom Keenan from the U of C's Faculty of Environmental Design, spoke to the issue of computer data security, the privacy of individual data, and the prospect of quantum computers revolutionizing the future of computing and security. Moderator for the evening was Ben Reed, Director of Calgary's Protospace, a home for hackers and computer innovators. The Ironwood Stage and Grill in Inglewood was again packed with a capacity crowd of 140 for the 2-hour Café.

A capacity crowd enjoyed the discussion led by Ben Reed, Tom Keenan, and Barry Sanders.

 

The April 24, 2012 Science Café staged by TELUS Spark focused on "Hacking and Cracking: How Safe Are You and Your Computer Systems?"

 

Drs. Barry Sanders, iCORE Chair of Quantum Information Science at the U of C, and Tom Keenan from the U of C's Faculty of Environmental Design, spoke to the issue of computer data security, the privacy of individual data, and the prospect of quantum computers revolutionizing the future of computing and security. Moderator for the evening was Ben Reed, Director of Calgary's Protospace, a home for hackers and computer innovators. The Ironwood Stage and Grill in Inglewood was again packed with a capacity crowd of 140 for the 2-hour Café.

Left: Marc Savanier, a postdoctoral researcher with the Micro-Nano-Photonics research group at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering.

 

Right: said Ranjeet Kumar, an electrical engineering graduate student at UC San Diego and lead author of the Nature Communications paper

The April 24, 2012 Science Café staged by TELUS Spark focused on "Hacking and Cracking: How Safe Are You and Your Computer Systems?"

 

Drs. Barry Sanders, iCORE Chair of Quantum Information Science at the U of C, and Tom Keenan from the U of C's Faculty of Environmental Design, spoke to the issue of computer data security, the privacy of individual data, and the prospect of quantum computers revolutionizing the future of computing and security. Moderator for the evening was Ben Reed, Director of Calgary's Protospace, a home for hackers and computer innovators. The Ironwood Stage and Grill in Inglewood was again packed with a capacity crowd of 140 for the 2-hour Café.

IBM Q

Quantum Computing

MIT Technology Review Innovation Leaders Summit

Palais Brongniard

30 Novembre 2018

My son, Matthew, who is a graduate student in Physics, explains "Jules" the ultra refrigerator used to conduct superconducting quantum computing experiments. The pseudo HDR image was produced by tonemapping a single raw file in Photomatix.

 

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View the entire People and Portraits Set

View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr

 

IBM Q

Quantum Computing

MIT Technology Review Innovation Leaders Summit

Palais Brongniard

30 Novembre 2018

Macroscopic Quantum Coherence and Quantum Computing - Kluwer Academic

Left: Marc Savanier, a postdoctoral researcher with the Micro-Nano-Photonics research group at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering.

 

Right: said Ranjeet Kumar, an electrical engineering graduate student at UC San Diego and lead author of the Nature Communications paper

The Ironwood Stage and Grill in Inglewood was again packed with a capacity crowd of 140 for the 2-hour Café.

 

The April 24, 2012 Science Café staged by TELUS Spark focused on "Hacking and Cracking: How Safe Are You and Your Computer Systems?"

 

Drs. Barry Sanders, iCORE Chair of Quantum Information Science at the U of C, and Tom Keenan from the U of C's Faculty of Environmental Design, spoke to the issue of computer data security, the privacy of individual data, and the prospect of quantum computers revolutionizing the future of computing and security. Moderator for the evening was Ben Reed, Director of Calgary's Protospace, a home for hackers and computer innovators.

Yes. That block of pink foam. Found in Harvard's data center.

The sites in industrial diamods with nitrogen atoms produce quantum particles. You can use lasers to load the superpositions onto the particles and then use them for quantum computing.

The silicon photonic chip ( about 3 x 15 millimeters in size) consists of planar waveguide circuits in which photons are generated and the propagation of light is electronically controlled. The horizontal stripes of the chip correspond to different types of silicon photonics structures used to generate and control light; the features used in this experiment were located near the middle of the chip.

Fujitsu Keynote: “Trust and Co-creation in the Digital Era”

Shigeru Sasaki, CEO, Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd.

 

Digital Annealer is a new technology to solve large-scale combinatorial optimization problems instantly. It uses a digital circuit design inspired by quantum phenomena and can solve problems which are tough for classical computers to deal with. ... The most practical computer to solve ...

 

www.fujitsu.com/global/digitalannealer/superiority/

 

The silicon photonic chip ( about 3 x 15 millimeters in size) consists of planar waveguide circuits in which photons are generated and the propagation of light is electronically controlled. The horizontal stripes of the chip correspond to different types of silicon photonics structures used to generate and control light; the features used in this experiment were located near the middle of the chip.

Dr. Barry Sanders (right), director of the University of Calgary's Institute for Quantum Information Science, explains the amazing world of quantum computing and quantum cryptography, during the November 12 lecture in the "Genius Speaker Series" of Friday night science talks featuring top researchers from the fields of biology and physics, complementing the Darwin and Einstein exhibits.

MAIN GALLERY OSWA (OneStrokeWaterArt) CURATION In Progress: youpic.com/photographer/ArtistGeneral/

MRI (MysteryRepeatsItself--'The World's First Bowhammer Cymbalom CD, Here Re-Harnessed For Silent-Optic Playback; To Harvest A Radically Unique New Depth Of Field, To BOLDLY GO Where No...etc!)--SEA-SCAN FACE-LIFT (One Of Thousands Currently In Curation) --EACH One-Of-A-KIND (Manifestly Unrepeatable) Snapshots Taken Over 5 Years From Anchored Raft In San Francisco Bay, By Light Of Night & Day, Dusk & Dawn, Sun & Moon...

A Wallpaper Collage / Remix from different sources

FanArt

Created with support by www.remove.bg

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Vom Apfel zum Ei - From apple to egg - De la pomme à l'œuf

From Newton's apple to the melting egg.

Richard P Feynman (May 11, 1918 – February 15, 1988) was an American physicist known for the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics, the theory of quantum electrodynamics and the physics of the superfluidity of supercooled liquid helium, as well as work in particle physics.

 

He assisted in the development of the atomic bomb and was a member of the panel that investigated the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. In addition to his work in theoretical physics, Feynman has been credited with pioneering the field of quantum computing, and introducing the concept of nanotechnology (creation of devices at the molecular scale).

 

Feynman is also known for his semi-autobiographical books Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! and What Do You Care What Other People Think? Regarded as an eccentric and a free spirit, he was also known as a prankster, juggler, a proud amateur painter and bongo player who liked to pursue multiple, seemingly unrelated, paths, such as biology, art, percussion, Maya hieroglyphs, and lock picking.

 

----

 

While Six Easy Pieces, Feynman's "introduction" to physics, is pretty heavy going, his two autobiographies are a great place to start. An absolutely fascinating and highly amusing look at the life of a remarkable and unique character. And, thankfully, no knowledge of physics is required.

At BlackBerry Bold Launch in London introducing the band: The Feeling

Neutron scattering has revealed in unprecedented detail new insights into the exotic magnetic behavior of a material that, with a fuller understanding, could pave the way for quantum calculations far beyond the limits of the ones and zeros of a computer’s binary code.

 

A research team led by the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory has confirmed magnetic signatures likely related to Majorana fermions—elusive particles that could be the basis for a quantum bit, or qubit, in a two-dimensional graphene-like material, alpha-ruthenium trichloride. The results, published in the journal Science, verify and extend a 2016 Nature Materials study in which the team of researchers from ORNL, University of Tennessee, Max Planck Institute and Cambridge University first proposed this unusual behavior in the material.

 

Credit: ORNL/Jill Hemman

A powerful development is anticipated for the global quantum processing market throughout the following couple of years. The market is relied upon to observe a CAGR of 34% during the conjecture time frame (2018-2023), achieving a size of USD 2.82 billion.

For information visit - www.aarkstore.com/ict/1774542/global-quantum-computing-ma...

At BlackBerry Bold Launch in London introducing the band: The Feeling

"WE LIVE BEYOND OUR MEANS Of Understanding"--Wyatt Matturs--/ OSAW (OneStrokeArtWater) MRI (MysteryRepeatsItself) The World's First Bowhammer Cymbalom CD "Radically Repurposed" For Surreal Form, Spectral Figure, & Haunted Face-Lift From 'Flared' Bodies Of Water (Sea, Lake, Creek, Puddle) Still, Or Moving, In Conditions Of Light (Street, Moon, Sun)

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At BlackBerry Bold Launch in London introducing the band: The Feeling

At BlackBerry Bold Launch in London introducing the band: The Feeling

Black Holes and Quantum Computing - Prof. Marika Taylor - The Rifle, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

Explore quantum computing and look at the relationship between it and the cloud. goo.gl/TWRN51

Black Holes and Quantum Computing - Prof. Marika Taylor - The Rifle, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

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MAIN GALLERY CURATION In-Progress:

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