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Daily Archives: June 29, 2017
Multi-coloured photons in 100 dimensions may make quantum … – Cosmos
Posted: June 29, 2017 at 11:56 am
An illustration showing high-dimensional color-entangled photon states from a photonic chip, manipulated and transmitted via telecommunications systems.
Michael Kues
Researchers using off-the-shelf telecommunications equipment have created a 100-dimensional quantum system from the entanglement of two subatomic particles.
The system can be controlled and manipulated to perform high-level gateway functions a critical component of any viable quantum computer the scientists report in the journal Nature.
The team, led by Michael Kues of the University of Glasgow, effectively created a quantum photon generator on a chip. The tiny device uses a micro-ring resonator generate entangled pairs of photons from a laser input.
The entanglement is far from simple. Each photon is composed of a superposition of several different colours, all expressed simultaneously, giving the photon several dimensions. The expression of any individual colour or frequency, if you like is mirrored across the two entangled photons, regardless of the distance between them.
The complexity of the photon pairs represents a major step forward in manipulating quantum entities.
Almost all research into quantum states, for the purpose of developing quantum computing, has to date focussed on qubits: artificially created subatomic particles that exist in a superposition two possible states. (They are the quantum equivalent of standard computing bits, basic units that are capable only of being switched between 1 and 0, or yes/no, or on/off.)
Kues and colleagues are instead working with qudits, which are essentially qubits with superpositions comprising three or more states.
In 2016, Russian researchers showed that qudit-based quantum computing systems were inherently more stable than their two dimensional predecessors.
The Russians, however, were working with a subset of qudits called qutrits, which comprise a superposition of three possible states. Kues and his team upped the ante considerably, fashioning qudits comprising 10 possible states one for each of the colours, or frequencies, of the photon giving an entangled pair a minimum of 100.
And thats just the beginning. Team member Roberto Morandotti of the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, in Chengdu, suggests that further refinement will produce entangled two-qudit systems containing as many as 9000 dimensions, bringing a robustness and complexity to quantum computers that is at present unreachable.
Kues adds that perhaps the most attractive feature of his teams achievement is that it was done using commercially available components. This means that the strategy can be quickly and easily adapted by other researchers in the field, potentially ushering in a period of very rapid development.
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Multi-coloured photons in 100 dimensions may make quantum ... - Cosmos
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Physics4Kids.com: Modern Physics: Quantum Mechanics
Posted: at 11:56 am
If you apply this idea to the structure of an atom, in the older, Bohr model, there is a nucleus and there are rings (levels) of energy around the nucleus. The length of each orbit was related to a wavelength. No two electrons can have all the same wave characteristics. Scientists now say that electrons behave like waves, and fill areas of the atom like sound waves might fill a room. The electrons, then, exist in something scientists call "electron clouds". The size of the shells now relates to the size of the cloud. This is where the spdf stuff comes in, as these describe the shape of the clouds.
Look at the Heisenberg uncertainty principle in a more general way using the observer effect. While Heisenberg looks at measurements, you can see parallels in larger observations. You can not observe something naturally without affecting it in some way. The light and photons used to watch an electron would move the electron. When you go out in a field in Africa and the animals see you, they will act differently. If you are a psychiatrist asking a patient some questions, you are affecting him, so the answers may be changed by the way the questions are worded. Field scientists work very hard to try and observe while interfering as little as possible.
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Quantum computers are about to get real – Science News Magazine
Posted: at 11:56 am
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 companys 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.
Quantum computers arent putting standard computers to shame just yet. The most advanced computers are working with fewer than two dozen qubits. But teams from industry and academia are working on expanding their own versions of quantum computers to 50 or 100 qubits, enough to perform certain calculations that the most powerful supercomputers cant pull off.
The race is on to reach that milestone, known as quantum supremacy. Scientists should meet this goal within a couple of years, says quantum physicist David Schuster of the University of Chicago. Theres no reason that I see that it wont work.
Cooling systems (Googles shown) maintain frigid temperatures for the superconducting quantum processor, which sits at the bottom of the contraption. The system is enclosed in a water heatersized container.
But supremacy is only an initial step, a symbolic marker akin to sticking a flagpole into the ground of an unexplored landscape. The first tasks where quantum computers prevail will be contrived problems set up to be difficult for a standard computer but easy for a quantum one. Eventually, the hope is, the computers will become prized tools of scientists and businesses.
Some of the first useful problems quantum computers will probably tackle will be to simulate small molecules or chemical reactions. From there, the computers could go on to speed the search for new drugs or kick-start the development of energy-saving catalysts to accelerate chemical reactions. To find the best material for a particular job, quantum computers could search through millions of possibilities to pinpoint the ideal choice, for example, ultrastrong polymers for use in airplane wings. Advertisers could use a quantum algorithm to improve their product recommendations dishing out an ad for that new cell phone just when youre on the verge of purchasing one.
Quantum computers could provide a boost to machine learning, too, allowing for nearly flawless handwriting recognition or helping self-driving cars assess the flood of data pouring in from their sensors to swerve away from a child running into the street. And scientists might use quantum computers to explore exotic realms of physics, simulating what might happen deep inside a black hole, for example.
But quantum computers wont reach their real potential which will require harnessing the power of millions of qubits for more than a decade. Exactly what possibilities exist for the long-term future of quantum computers is still up in the air.
The outlook is similar to the patchy vision that surrounded the development of standard computers which quantum scientists refer to as classical computers in the middle of the 20th century. When they began to tinker with electronic computers, scientists couldnt fathom all of the eventual applications; they just knew the machines possessed great power. From that initial promise, classical computers have become indispensable in science and business, dominating daily life, with handheld smartphones becoming constant companions (SN: 4/1/17, p. 18).
Were very excited about the potential to really revolutionize what we can compute.
Krysta Svore
Since the 1980s, when the idea of a quantum computer first attracted interest, progress has come in fits and starts. Without the ability to create real quantum computers, the work remained theoretical, and it wasnt clear when or if quantum computations would be achievable. Now, with the small quantum computers at hand, and new developments coming swiftly, scientists and corporations are preparing for a new technology that finally seems within reach.
Companies are really paying attention, Microsofts Krysta Svore said March 13 in New Orleans during a packed session at a meeting of the American Physical Society. Enthusiastic physicists filled the room and huddled at the doorways, straining to hear as she spoke. Svore and her team are exploring what these nascent quantum computers might eventually be capable of. Were very excited about the potential to really revolutionize what we can compute.
Quantum computings promise is rooted in quantum mechanics, the counterintuitive physics that governs tiny entities such as atoms, electrons and molecules. The basic element of a quantum computer is the qubit (pronounced CUE-bit). Unlike a standard computer bit, which can take on a value of 0 or 1, a qubit can be 0, 1 or a combination of the two a sort of purgatory between 0 and 1 known as a quantum superposition. When a qubit is measured, theres some chance of getting 0 and some chance of getting 1. But before its measured, its both 0 and 1.
Because qubits can represent 0 and 1 simultaneously, they can encode a wealth of information. In computations, both possibilities 0 and 1 are operated on at the same time, allowing for a sort of parallel computation that speeds up solutions.
Another qubit quirk: Their properties can be intertwined through the quantum phenomenon of entanglement (SN: 4/29/17, p. 8). A measurement of one qubit in an entangled pair instantly reveals the value of its partner, even if they are far apart what Albert Einstein called spooky action at a distance.
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In quantum computing, programmers execute a series of operations, called gates, to flip qubits (represented by black horizontal lines), entangle them to link their properties, or put them in a superposition, representing 0 and 1 simultaneously. First, some gate definitions:
X gate: Flips a qubit from a 0 to a 1, or vice versa.
Hadamard gate: Puts a qubit into a superposition of states.
Controlled not gate: Flips a second qubit only if the first qubit is 1.
Scientists can combine gates like the ones above into complex sequences to perform calculations that are not possible with classical computers. One such quantum algorithm, called Grovers search, speeds up searches, such as scanning fingerprint databases for a match. To understand how this works, consider a simple game show.
In this game show, four doors hide one car and three goats. A contestant must open a door at random in hopes of finding the car. Grovers search looks at all possibilities at once and amplifies the desired one, so the contestant is more likely to find the car. The two qubits represent four doors, labeled in binary as 00, 01, 10 and 11. In this example, the car is hidden behind door 11.
Step 1:Puts both qubits in a superposition. All four doors have equal probability. Step 2:Hides the car behind door 11. In a real-world example, this information would be stored in a quantum database. Step 3:Amplifies the probability of getting the correct answer, 11, when the qubits are measured. Step 4: Measures both qubits; the result is 11.
Source: IBM Research; Graphics: T. Tibbitts
Such weird quantum properties can make for superefficient calculations. But the approach wont speed up solutions for every problem thrown at it. Quantum calculators are particularly suited to certain types of puzzles, the kind for which correct answers can be selected by a process called quantum interference. Through quantum interference, the correct answer is amplified while others are canceled out, like sets of ripples meeting one another in a lake, causing some peaks to become larger and others to disappear.
One of the most famous potential uses for quantum computers is breaking up large integers into their prime factors. For classical computers, this task is so difficult that credit card data and other sensitive information are secured via encryption based on factoring numbers. Eventually, a large enough quantum computer could break this type of encryption, factoring numbers that would take millions of years for a classical computer to crack.
Quantum computers also promise to speed up searches, using qubits to more efficiently pick out an information needle in a data haystack.
Qubits can be made using a variety of materials, including ions, silicon or superconductors, which conduct electricity without resistance. Unfortunately, none of these technologies allow for a computer that will fit easily on a desktop. Though the computer chips themselves are tiny, they depend on large cooling systems, vacuum chambers or other bulky equipment to maintain the delicate quantum properties of the qubits. Quantum computers will probably be confined to specialized laboratories for the foreseeable future, to be accessed remotely via the internet.
That vision of Web-connected quantum computers has already begun to Quantum computing is exciting. Its coming, and we want a lot more people to be well-versed in itmaterialize. In 2016, IBM unveiled the Quantum Experience, a quantum computer that anyone around the world can access online for free.
Quantum computing is exciting. Its coming, and we want a lot more people to be well-versed in it.
Jerry Chow
With only five qubits, the Quantum Experience is limited in what you can do, says Jerry Chow, who manages IBMs experimental quantum computing group. (IBMs 16-qubit computer is in beta testing, so Quantum Experience users are just beginning to get their hands on it.) Despite its limitations, the Quantum Experience has allowed scientists, computer programmers and the public to become familiar with programming quantum computers which follow different rules than standard computers and therefore require new ways of thinking about problems. Quantum computing is exciting. Its coming, and we want a lot more people to be well-versed in it, Chow says. Thatll make the development and the advancement even faster.
But to fully jump-start quantum computing, scientists will need to prove that their machines can outperform the best standard computers. This step is important to convince the community that youre building an actual quantum computer, says quantum physicist Simon Devitt of Macquarie University in Sydney. A demonstration of such quantum supremacy could come by the end of the year or in 2018, Devitt predicts.
Researchers from Google set out a strategy to demonstrate quantum supremacy, posted online at arXiv.org in 2016. They proposed an algorithm that, if run on a large enough quantum computer, would produce results that couldnt be replicated by the worlds most powerful supercomputers.
The method involves performing random operations on the qubits, and measuring the distribution of answers that are spit out. Getting the same distribution on a classical supercomputer would require simulating the complex inner workings of a quantum computer. Simulating a quantum computer with more than about 45 qubits becomes unmanageable. Supercomputers havent been able to reach these quantum wilds.
To enter this hinterland, Google, which has a nine-qubit computer, has aggressive plans to scale up to 49 qubits. Were pretty optimistic, says Googles John Martinis, also a physicist at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Martinis and colleagues plan to proceed in stages, working out the kinks along the way. You build something, and then if its not working exquisitely well, then you dont do the next one you fix whats going on, he says. The researchers are currently developing quantum computers of 15 and 22 qubits.
IBM, like Google, also plans to go big. In March, the company announced it would build a 50-qubit computer in the next few years and make it available to businesses eager to be among the first adopters of the burgeoning technology. Just two months later, in May, IBM announced that its scientists had created the 16-qubit quantum computer, as well as a 17-qubit prototype that will be a technological jumping-off point for the companys future line of commercial computers.
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But a quantum computer is much more than the sum of its qubits. One of the real key aspects about scaling up is not simply qubit number, but really improving the device performance, Chow says. So IBM researchers are focusing on a standard they call quantum volume, which takes into account several factors. These include the number of qubits, how each qubit is connected to its neighbors, how quickly errors slip into calculations and how many operations can be performed at once. These are all factors that really give your quantum processor its power, Chow says.
Errors are a major obstacle to boosting quantum volume. With their delicate quantum properties, qubits can accumulate glitches with each operation. Qubits must resist these errors or calculations quickly become unreliable. Eventually, quantum computers with many qubits will be able to fix errors that crop up, through a procedure known as error correction. Still, to boost the complexity of calculations quantum computers can take on, qubit reliability will need to keep improving.
Different technologies for forming qubits have various strengths and weaknesses, which affect quantum volume. IBM and Google build their qubits out of superconducting materials, as do many academic scientists. In superconductors cooled to extremely low temperatures, electrons flow unimpeded. To fashion superconducting qubits, scientists form circuits in which current flows inside a loop of wire made of aluminum or another superconducting material.
Several teams of academic researchers create qubits from single ions, trapped in place and probed with lasers. Intel and others are working with qubits fabricated from tiny bits of silicon known as quantum dots (SN: 7/11/15, p. 22). Microsoft is studying what are known as topological qubits, which would be extra-resistant to errors creeping into calculations. Qubits can even be forged from diamond, using defects in the crystal that isolate a single electron. Photonic quantum computers, meanwhile, make calculations using particles of light. A Chinese-led team demonstrated in a paper published May 1 in Nature Photonics that a light-based quantum computer could outperform the earliest electronic computers on a particular problem.
One company, D-Wave, claims to have a quantum computer that can perform serious calculations, albeit using a more limited strategy than other quantum computers (SN: 7/26/14, p. 6). But many scientists are skeptical about the approach. The general consensus at the moment is that something quantum is happening, but its still very unclear what it is, says Devitt.
While superconducting qubits have received the most attention from giants like IBM and Google, underdogs taking different approaches could eventually pass these companies by. One potential upstart is Chris Monroe, who crafts ion-based quantum computers.
On a walkway near his office on the University of Maryland campus in College Park, a banner featuring a larger-than-life portrait of Monroe adorns a fence. The message: Monroes quantum computers are a fearless idea. The banner is part of an advertising campaign featuring several of the universitys researchers, but Monroe seems an apt choice, because his research bucks the trend of working with superconducting qubits.
Monroe and his small army of researchers arrange ions in neat lines, manipulating them with lasers. In a paper published in Nature in 2016, Monroe and colleagues debuted a five-qubit quantum computer, made of ytterbium ions, allowing scientists to carry out various quantum computations. A 32-ion computer is in the works, he says.
Monroes labs he has half a dozen of them on campus dont resemble anything normally associated with computers. Tables hold an indecipherable mess of lenses and mirrors, surrounding a vacuum chamber that houses the ions. As with IBMs computer, although the full package is bulky, the quantum part is minuscule: The chain of ions spans just hundredths of a millimeter.
Scientists in laser goggles tend to the whole setup. The foreign nature of the equipment explains why ion technology for quantum computing hasnt taken off yet, Monroe says. So he and colleagues took matters into their own hands, creating a start-up called IonQ, which plans to refine ion computers to make them easier to work with.
Monroe points out a few advantages of his technology. In particular, ions of the same type are identical. In other systems, tiny differences between qubits can muck up a quantum computers operations. As quantum computers scale up, Monroe says, there will be a big price to pay for those small differences. Having qubits that are identical, over millions of them, is going to be really important.
In a paper published in March in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Monroe and colleagues compared their quantum computer with IBMs Quantum Experience. The ion computer performed operations more slowly than IBMs superconducting one, but it benefited from being more interconnected each ion can be entangled with any other ion, whereas IBMs qubits can be entangled only with adjacent qubits. That interconnectedness means that calculations can be performed in fewer steps, helping to make up for the slower operation speed, and minimizing the opportunity for errors.
Story continues below table
Two different quantum computers one using ion qubits, the other superconducting qubits went head-to-head in a recent comparison. Both five-qubit computers performed similarly, but each had its own advantages: The superconducting computer was faster; the ion computer was more interconnected, needing fewer steps to perform calculations.
Source: N.M. Linkeet al/PNAS2017
Computers like Monroes are still far from unlocking the full power of quantum computing. To perform increasingly complex tasks, scientists will have to correct the errors that slip into calculations, fixing problems on the fly by spreading information out among many qubits. Unfortunately, such error correction multiplies the number of qubits required by a factor of 10, 100 or even thousands, depending on the quality of the qubits. Fully error-corrected quantum computers will require millions of qubits. Thats still a long way off.
So scientists are sketching out some simple problems that quantum computers could dig into without error correction. One of the most important early applications will be to study the chemistry of small molecules or simple reactions, by using quantum computers to simulate the quantum mechanics of chemical systems. In 2016, scientists from Google, Harvard University and other institutions performed such a quantum simulation of a hydrogen molecule. Hydrogen has already been simulated with classical computers with similar results, but more complex molecules could follow as quantum computers scale up.
Once error-corrected quantum computers appear, many quantum physicists have their eye on one chemistry problem in particular: making fertilizer. Though it seems an unlikely mission for quantum physicists, the task illustrates the game-changing potential of quantum computers.
The Haber-Bosch process, which is used to create nitrogen-rich fertilizers, is hugely energy intensive, demanding high temperatures and pressures. The process, essential for modern farming, consumes around 1 percent of the worlds energy supply. There may be a better way. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria easily extract nitrogen from the air, thanks to the enzyme nitrogenase. Quantum computers could help simulate this enzyme and reveal its properties, perhaps allowing scientists to design a catalyst to improve the nitrogen fixation reaction, make it more efficient, and save on the worlds energy, says Microsofts Svore. Thats the kind of thing we want to do on a quantum computer. And for that problem it looks like well need error correction.
Pinpointing applications that dont require error correction is difficult, and the possibilities are not fully mapped out. Its not because they dont exist; I think its because physicists are not the right people to be finding them, says Devitt, of Macquarie. Once the hardware is available, the thinking goes, computer scientists will come up with new ideas.
Thats why companies like IBM are pushing their quantum computers to users via the Web. A lot of these companies are realizing that they need people to start playing around with these things, Devitt says.
Quantum scientists are trekking into a new, uncharted realm of computation, bringing computer programmers along for the ride. The capabilities of these fledgling systems could reshape the way society uses computers.
Eventually, quantum computers may become part of the fabric of our technological society. Quantum computers could become integrated into a quantum internet, for example, which would be more secure than what exists today (SN: 10/15/16, p. 13).
Quantum computers and quantum communication effectively allow you to do things in a much more private way, says physicist Seth Lloyd of MIT, who envisions Web searches that not even the search engine can spy on.
There are probably plenty more uses for quantum computers that nobody has thought up yet.
Were not sure exactly what these are going to be used for. That makes it a little weird, Monroe says. But, he maintains, the computers will find their niches. Build it and they will come.
This story appears in the July 8, 2017, issue ofScience Newswith the headline, "Quantum Computers Get Real: As the first qubit-based machines come online, scientists are just beginning to imagine the possibilities."
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Donald Trump is in the small minority of Americans who thinks Trump’s tweets are good – Washington Post
Posted: at 11:56 am
The Fix's Callum Borchers explains the years-long feud between President Trump and the hosts of MSNBC's "Morning Joe." (Peter Stevenson/The Washington Post)
Well allow @RealPressSecBot, an automated Twitter bot that takes President Trumps tweets and formats them like official White House statements, do the honors with the tweets Trump issued Thursday morning.
Yeah, you know, just the president of the United States getting mad at cable news pundits and then lobbing a stunningly personal insult at one of them. Its almost odd to still be shocked by a Trump tweet, but here we are.
Trump has, in the past, celebrated his Twitter account as a means of communicating to the country without the filter of traditional media. (In this case, I can assure the president that if hed made this comment to a reporter, it would have been reported without any editing.)
He has no choice but to tweet, he said in December.
Earlier this month, he declared that the media hates his tweets precisely because it allows him to share his honest and unfiltered words with the country.
But, interestingly, the media is one of the few groups in the country that actually supports his Twitter addiction. Not only because most members of the media suffer from the same affliction, but also because it offers a fascinating insight into the mental processes of an unusual political figure.
Most other Americans, though, are more skeptical.
A PBS NewsHour-Marist poll releasedWednesday asked respondents if they thought Trumps tweets were effective and informative or if they were reckless and distracting. Overall, 7-in-10 adults chose the latter description.
In no group even Trump supporters did at least half say the tweets were effective and informative. Even Republicans were about split between the two choices. More than a third of those who approve of the job Trump is doing in office think his tweets are a net negative.
More than half of whites without college degrees and evangelical Christians two groups at the core of Trumps base of support think his tweeting is a net negative. Only 1-in-5 Americans thinks his tweets are effective, a figure so low that its almost at Senate-health-care-bill levels.
Nearly every Democrat, unsurprisingly, and two-thirds of independents view Trumps tweets in a negative light.
Its probably true that Trump sees his Twitter account as a way of sharing his unvarnished thoughts with the world. For all the constraints of his new position, @realDonaldTrump is one of the few outlets he has to be himself, to riff on whatever strikes his fancy at the moment. (You cant have a giant rally in a red state every night, after all. Probably.) The Twitter account is not really about keeping the public informed, then. Its a pressure release valve. Its a way to keep the boiler from exploding.
It may, therefore, do Trump some good personally. It almost certainly doesnt do him much good politically.
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Trump’s surprise Paris visit marks shrewd political calculation – CNN
Posted: at 11:56 am
Trump announced Wednesday that he would be in Paris on Bastille Day, July 14, for a day of pageantry at an event that will mark 100 years since the US entry into World War I.
The US President, on his second trip to Europe in two weeks -- he heads to Germany for the G20 summit and Poland next week -- will bask in the pomp of his official role as commander-in-chief at a time when he is under political siege at home.
"The two leaders will further build on the strong counter-terrorism cooperation and economic partnership between the two countries, and they will discuss many other issues of mutual concern," the White House said in a statement on Wednesday.
Macron, who was elected in May and won a broad mandate for his brand of outsider politics in parliamentary elections earlier this month, will use the visit to signal that despite his deep differences with Trump on issues like global warming, he is determined to maintain the alliance between the US and France, which has endured for more than two centuries.
"Macron is not inviting Donald Trump, he is inviting the President of the United States," said Nicholas Dungan, a former president of the French American Foundation, who teaches at Sciences Po, a prestigious French research university.
The visit will also further Macron's clear attempt to establish himself in the top rank of world leaders, despite his inexperience and relative youth. The French President is 30 years younger than his American counterpart.
Macron recently flattered Russian President Vladimir Putin at the French royal palace at Versailles but also put on a bravura performance, speaking directly about alleged Russian meddling in the French election and the "lying propaganda" of Russian state media networks.
"Tonight I wish to tell the United States, France believes in you. The world believes in you. I know that you are a great nation," Macron said in the video against a backdrop of the French tricolor and the flag of the European Union.
"I know your history, our common history," he said, calling on scientists, engineers and "responsible citizens" disappointed by Trump's decision to find a "second homeland" in France to work together on concrete solutions to climate change, and co-opted Trump's campaign theme in a swipe at the President by saying he wanted to "make the planet great again."
The trip to Paris also represents an about turn for Trump, who has sometimes denigrated the French capital and French government's policies on Muslim immigration following a series of terror attacks.
"A friend of mine, he said he was going to France like three or four months ago. I saw him yesterday. I said, how did you like France? He said, 'I wouldn't go to France. I wouldn't go to France because France is no longer France,'" Trump said in Florida at a campaign event last July.
"France is no longer France. They won't like me for saying that but ... France is no longer France and this world better be very careful and they better get very tough and very smart," Trump said.
Macron was endorsed by Obama ahead of his election win and may be making an attempt to fill the global leadership vacuum that many allies perceive was left by the US decision to walk away from global efforts to combat climate change and Trump's oft voiced skepticism towards NATO.
His victory over far right leader Marine Le Pen in May represented a triumph over the wave of populism that has been sweeping democracies and helped elect Trump and has already elevated him to the top tier of Western leadership, alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
A source who spoke with Trump after the G7 summit told CNN's Kevin Liptak that the President was annoyed after sitting through lectures from leaders including Macron and Merkel about the Paris accord during his previous visit to Europe.
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Vice Retracts Articles About Donald Trump’s Animatronic Robot at Disney World – Variety
Posted: at 11:56 am
Vice Medias Motherboard tech site has retracted two articles supposedly revealing discord at Disney Parks about Donald Trumps presence in the Hall of Presidents attraction citing factual errors and questions about sourcing for the pieces.
After a thorough investigation into the sourcing of two stories, Heres the Secret Backstage Trump Drama at Walt Disney Worlds Hall of Presidents and Behind the Scenes of Disneys Donald Trump Hall of Presidents Installation, and the identification of several factual errors, we have decided to retract both pieces, Motherboard said in an editorial note posted Wednesday in place of the two articles.
The note added, We are conducting a full editorial review to pinpoint how this source was vetted, and how these stories were approved and published in violation of our usual editorial workflow. We fell short of our standards, and regret the error.
The Motherboard story published on Monday, June 26, alleged that there was internal debate at Disney about whether Trumps animatronic figure would be speaking in the exhibit. The story also claimed, citing an anonymous source, that Trumps team was insisting on writing the entire speech for his robotic avatar in Disney Worlds Hall of Presidents.
That led Disney Parks to issue a statement that Trump will in fact be represented in the Hall of Presidents with a speaking role. The earlier Motherboard story, Heres the Secret Backstage Trump Drama at Walt Disney Worlds Hall of Presidents, published May 19, had cited an anonymous source close to Walt Disney Imagineering who claimed the animatronic Trump will probably not have a speaking role.
Disney is among Vice Medias investors, holding a $400 million stake in the millennial-skewing media company.
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Vice Retracts Articles About Donald Trump's Animatronic Robot at Disney World - Variety
Posted in Donald Trump
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Clinton Portis Talks Urge to Commit Murder, Bankruptcy in SI … – Bleacher Report
Posted: at 11:55 am
Carlos Osorio/Associated Press
In an interview with Brian Burnsed ofSports Illustratedon Wednesday, former NFL running back Clinton Portis recounted considering murder as a means of revenge for going bankrupt.
According to Burnsed, nearly all of the money Portis handed over to a group of men to manage and make safe investments with in 2013 disappeared, which resulted in his contemplating murder.
"It wasn't no beat up," Portis said."It waskill."
Portis discussed sitting in his car outside aWashington, D.C., office building with a pistol in his possession in hopes of confronting one of the investors who squandered his money.
A trio of financial advisersJeff Rubin,Jinesh Brahmbhatt andFuad Ahmedallegedly steered Portis toward faulty investments that resulted in millions lost for the former running back.
In his 2015 bankruptcy filings, Portis made potential claims of $11 million against them, but he believes it is unlikely he will recover anything close to that number.
Along with investment issues, Burnsed wrote in detail about Portis' lavish spending on cars, houses, clothing and trips, all of which contributed to his eventual bankruptcy.
Despite the losses, Portis told Burnsed he believes he can earn much of it back through a broadcasting career and appearance fees.
Portis also told Burnsed that he sustained more than 10 concussions during his career and is eligible to receive compensation as part of theNFL's $1 billion concussion settlement if he displays the requisite symptoms.
Rather than attempting to collect, however, Portis said he'd rather not know if there's anything seriously wrong with him:"F--k that concussion money. I'm scared. I'm really scared of the results."
The 35-year-old Portis played nine NFL seasons with the Denver Broncos and Washington Redskins and was named to two Pro Bowls.
He topped 1,000 rushing yards in a season on six occasions, including three campaigns of 1,500 or more yards in his first four NFL seasons.
Portis last played during the 2010 season and retired having earned$43.1 million, per Burnsed.
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Clinton Portis Talks Urge to Commit Murder, Bankruptcy in SI ... - Bleacher Report
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Takata’s bankruptcy is a result of familiar failings – The Economist
Posted: at 11:55 am
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Takata's bankruptcy is a result of familiar failings - The Economist
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Updated: Premier Marine files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy – Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal
Posted: at 11:55 am
Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal | Updated: Premier Marine files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal Premier Marine was founded in 1992 with a focus on luxury pontoons. Pictured is the 2016 more. Robert Pearl Photography for Premier Marine Inc. A year after announcing plan to build a new manufacturing plant, the Wyoming, Minnesota-based pontoon ... |
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Updated: Premier Marine files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy - Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal
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Plant Vogtle: Critics want emergency public hearing on bankruptcy – Atlanta Journal Constitution
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Critics of the troubled Plant Vogtle nuclear project say state regulators are ignoring the $8 billion elephant in the room, and want the agency to hold public hearings on the projects growing price tag and delays after a key contractors bankruptcy.
Last week, Nuclear Watch South, an environmental advocacy group, filed a legal motion aimed at pushing the Georgia Public Service Commission to hold an emergency hearing on the Vogtle project following the March bankruptcy of Westinghouse Electric.
The public hearing is needed in light of the PSCs lack of response to the extraordinary circumstances clouding the future viability of the Vogtle 3 & 4 construction project, the group said. Nuclear Watch South is very concerned about the many millions of dollars that are extracted from the public each and every month and transferred to Georgia Power as real profit.
Thursday, the PSC will hold one of its periodic hearings on the half-built projects ongoing costs to finance and build two new nuclear reactors at the power plant near Augusta.
But the PSC so far hasnt delved into the effects of Westinghouses bankruptcy on the Vogtle expansions future, saying it is waiting for Georgia Power to complete its analysis of future options for the project, including continuing construction, converting it to natural gas plants or shutting it down.
Earlier this month, consultants for the PSCs Public Interest Advocacy staff suggested the Westinghouse bankruptcy could bump Georgia Powers share of Vogtles price tag to more than $8 billion and add three more years of delays.
The consultants also said the project likely no longer makes sense economically, compared to cheaper alternatives like natural gas-fired power plants.
In their analysis, Philip Hayet and Lane Kollen, with the Roswell firm J. Kennedy and Associates, assumed disruptions caused by Westinghouses bankruptcy could add another $3 billion in costs and three years of delays. They said the projections are hypothetical but consistent with providing the (PSC) a complete and accurate picture of the projects future outcome.
The extra delays, according to the consultants, could push the completion date out to mid-2022 for one reactor and mid-2023 for the second unit, and boost Georgia Powers share of costs from $5.4 billion up to $8.4 billion, not including billions in additional financing costs.
In such a scenario, it would be uneconomic to complete the Vogtle project, the consultants concluded, even if Westinghouses parent company, Toshiba Corp., makes good on billions of dollars of guarantees it has promised.
A Georgia Power spokesman said the consultants provided their analysis to the PSC before Georgia Power reached a deal with Toshiba setting a payment schedule for $3.7 billion in financial guarantees.
We are reviewing (the consultants testimony) and will discuss (it) with the Georgia PSC and all parties as part of the open (hearing) process, said Georgia Power spokesman Jacob Hawkins in a recent statement.
Meanwhile, Georgia Power, the PSC, and critics of the company and the commission are arguing over what testimony will be allowed at Thursdays hearing.
Tuesday, Georgia Power filed a motion asking the PSC to strike parts of testimony by two advocacy groups before Thursdays hearing. Georgia Power argued that some of the testimony is irrelevant, and that the parties cant both testify and cross-examine other witnesses in the hearings, such as Georgia Power executives.
The Commission should not allow Nuclear Watch South and the Concerned Ratepayers of Georgia to knowingly and willingly offer testimony that is clearly outside the scope of the hearings rules on such matters, Georgia Power said in its filing to the PSC.
PSC Chairman Stan Wise weighed in with an order reminding parties to follow the PSCs rules to preserve strict order during this proceeding, and to ensure fairness and the development of the record.
In a public comment period at the beginning of the hearings, for a few minutes each, several members of the public usually air their opposition or support for the Plant Vogtle expansion before the five-member commission.
A few advocacy groups usually also testify or question company or staff witnesses during the hearings. Often, they face a barrage of objections from Georgia Power lawyers and stern commands from PSC board members to limit the scope of their questions and avoid injecting their opinions when cross-examining witnesses.
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Plant Vogtle: Critics want emergency public hearing on bankruptcy - Atlanta Journal Constitution
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