The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: June 2017
Color-Changing Tattoos Could Help Millions Monitor Their Health in Real-Time – Futurism
Posted: June 15, 2017 at 8:44 pm
In Brief A collaboration between MIT and Harvard has yielded a fascinating new way to monitor dynamic levels in blood using color-changing tattoo ink. Though the team has no plans to pursue clinical trials, the technology could foreshadow the future of blood level monitoring. The Tattoo Test
Researchers from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)and Harvard Medical School have developed a tattoo ink that could provide real-time updates on the bodys health. By making ink that responds to interstitial fluid the liquid in which our cells are suspended the researchers have found a unique way to monitor blood glucose, sodium, and ph levels.
The idea of the DermalAbyss project is that an individual would have the ink tattooed onto their body in the pattern of their preference. The tattoo would then change color according to the amount of the activating agent present. A tattoo using the ink designed to respond to glucose levels, for example, would change color from blue to brown as the persons blood sugar level rises.
The technology is an ingenious interaction of the body-art, medical, and bio-sensor sectors. While the researchers haveno immediate plans to release their inkto the public, the potential of the project is huge, and others could possibly explore and expand upon it in the future.
Aside from the initial tattooing process, the researchers skin interfaces are non-invasive, unlike the methods currently usedto monitor diabetes. Theyre also much harder to damage than current wearable technology.
That means the tech could improve millions of lives in the United States alone by helping the 10 percent of the population with diabetesmore easily monitor their disease.
As stated on the project website,the technology could potentially be used to measure far more than just the levels tested in the study: It could be used for applications in [continuous] monitoring, such as medical diagnostics, quantified self, and data encoding in the body.
This isnt the only research exploring innovative uses of tattoos others have found ways to link body ink to sound filesor use it to control smartphones but this research is the first to explicitly explore the medical possibilities of inked biosensors. Though just a proof of concept right now, DermalAbyss could be offering us a glimpse into the future ofhealth monitoring.
Go here to see the original:
Color-Changing Tattoos Could Help Millions Monitor Their Health in Real-Time - Futurism
Posted in Futurism
Comments Off on Color-Changing Tattoos Could Help Millions Monitor Their Health in Real-Time – Futurism
Rachel Hatch, futurist and community vitality expert, to keynote regionalism / workforce track – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines
Posted: at 8:44 pm
Iowa Ideas
Jun 15, 2017 at 4:26 pm
Rachel Hatch, program officer for community vitality at The McConnell Foundation, will keynote the regionalism / workforce track at Iowa Ideas 2017. Hatch will speak Thursday, September 21in Cedar Rapids.
Hatch will bring a unique perspective to Iowa Ideas as a Cedar Falls native who has spent nearly a decade in Northern California, working with some of the world's largest companies to study and act on emerging trends.
The McConnell Foundation, which is based out of California, focuses on building better communities through philanthropy and awards money to non-profits, public education agencies and government agencies in Northern California. Hatch is currently concentrating on downtown revitalization in the community of Redding, California.
She previously served as the research director at the Institute for the Future, a think tank based in Palo Alto, California. She worked with Fortune 100 companies, government groups and philanthropic organizations to focus on trends and disruptions that are likely to influence their work in the next decade.
The aim of foresight is to anticipate the future in order to make better decisions in the present, she said in a reflection about her time with the Institute for the Future.
Rachel is also co-curator of TEDxRedding, which brings together practical visionaries from the Redding area and beyond to share ideas.
The Iowa Ideas Conference, Sept. 20-22, will include 80 sessions and more than 250 speakers across eight tracks. The statewide gathering will mix panel discussions, interviews with state leaders and thought-provoking experiences to help move complex issues forward. Iowa Ideas is for anyone: doers, industry leaders, policy makers, lifelong learners and those who want to lead the conversation about the future of our state.
Other topics to be discussedin the Regionalism / Workforce track include new approaches to workforce development, the impacts of technology on Iowa's employers, the role of immigrants and diverse populations in Iowa's workforce, rural community vitality and regional efforts.
Iowa Ideas 2017 will kick off Wednesday, September 20, with an opening celebration and keynote address from best-selling author and innovation expert Alec Ross.
See the original post:
Rachel Hatch, futurist and community vitality expert, to keynote regionalism / workforce track - The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines
Posted in Futurist
Comments Off on Rachel Hatch, futurist and community vitality expert, to keynote regionalism / workforce track – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines
12th Annual IT CAME FROM…THE NEO-FUTURARIUM! Lineup Announced – Broadway World
Posted: at 8:44 pm
Neo-Futurist alumnae Rachel Claff and Dina Walters curate It Came from ... the Neo-Futurarium XII: Dawn of the Neo-Futurarium! the 12th annual series of staged readings of the best worst film scripts of all time.
The summer 2017 festival features four of the clunkiest, junkiest movies ever made (details below), brought to life by past and present Neo-Futurists and acclaimed guest artists. Includes a Pride weekend show and gender-bending casts.
The festival will take place Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. (performances run 75-90 minutes without intermission):
Caged! (1950), June 24, 2017 Face/Off (1997), July 1, 2017 Suspiria (1977), July 8, 2017 Someone I Touched (1975), July 15, 2017
All events take place at The Neo-Futurarium, 5153 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago, IL 60640. Some street parking; Berwyn El stop (Red line); #92 (Foster) bus; #22 (Clark) bus.
Online tickets at neofilmfestxii.eventbrite.com. $15 for each performance; $12 for students (with ID); $50 for a festival pass (all four shows)
ABOUT THE FILMS:
June 24: Caged! (1950) - Nave teenager Marie is thrown into the ladies' slammer for being an accessory to robbery. Will she come out a woman ... or a wildcat? Bust out and come to this over-the-top Pride Weekend reading featuring an all-female-identified cast! Directed by Neo-Futurist alumnus David Kodeski (Wicked Woman; The Flaming Urge) and festival curator Rachel Claff.
July 1: Face/Off (1997) - In our 2009 reading of Cool as Ice, Dina Walters played the role she was born to play: Vanilla Ice. This year she plays the other role she was born to play: Nicolas Cage. Trying to take her down (via sketchy surgical science) is Neo-Futurist Kristie Koehler-Vuocolo as John Travolta. Bullets and doves will fly in this face-swappin', gender-swappin' spectacular! Walters also directs.
July 8: Suspiria (1977) - From the moment she arrives at the prestigious Tanz Academy, ballet dancer Suzy Bannion senses that something horribly evil lurks within its walls. So what if Suspiria's got gorgeous cinematography and buckets of gore? Director and Neo-Futurist alumna Stephanie Shaw is out to prove that this gonzo Italian horror film is as chock full of cheese as a good manicotti.
July 15: Someone I Touched (1975) - Man, made-for-TV movies were so different in the 1970s. Like, remember that one where a pregnant Cloris Leachman's husband cheated on her with a teenager and got syphilis? And then Cloris was worried her baby wouldn't have arms? But she still found time to sing the movie's theme song? *Sigh* Those were the days. Directed by festival veteran Edward Thomas-Herrera (Devil Girl from Mars; Sorority Girl).
Production team: Neo-Futurist alumna Rachel Claff (Creator, Head Curator), Neo-Futurist alumna Dina Walters (Assistant Curator), Jeremy Hornik (Selection Committee; Production), Jason Meyer (Selection Committee; Production), Bob Stockfish (Selection Committee; Production), and Neo-Futurist alumna MeLinda Evans (Technician).
It Came from ... the Neo-Futurarium! (staged readings of the best bad films of all time) was founded in 2002 by Neo-Futurist alumna Rachel Claff. Since then, over 60 terrible, awful movies have been staged, from sci-fi schlock (Devil Girl from Mars; Night of the Lepus) to deplorable drama (Day of the Dolphin) to miserable musicals (The Apple; Purple Rain) to appalling animation (My Little Pony: The Movie).
The festival has featured countless Neo-Futurists as well as theater companies from Chicago and beyond, including The House Theatre, The Plagiarists, Barrel of Monkeys, WildClaw Theatre, and Dad's Garage (Atlanta, GA). The "film fest," as it's affectionately called, has consistently played to sold-out crowds of movie aficionados and has garnered attention from the Chicago Tribune, Time Out Chicago, A/V Club, and more.
More information about ICFTNF is at http://www.facebook.com/ICFTNF, and for more about the Neo-Futurists, go to neofuturists.org or call 773-275-5255.
Read the original:
12th Annual IT CAME FROM...THE NEO-FUTURARIUM! Lineup Announced - Broadway World
Posted in Futurist
Comments Off on 12th Annual IT CAME FROM…THE NEO-FUTURARIUM! Lineup Announced – Broadway World
Best stargazing spots in Northern Virginia
Posted: at 7:53 am
Despite a dense population and seemingly denser traffic, Northern Virginia has its fair share of prime stargazing spots, many of which host regular educational classes and programs. Photo courtesy of Allexxandarx/Adobe Stock
For both amateur and seasoned astronomers, there are plenty of ways to get lost looking into space in D.C., like the National Air and Space Museumand farther out at Shenandoah National Park and Richmonds Virginia Living Museum. But despite a dense population and seemingly denser traffic, Northern Virginia also has its fair share of prime stargazing spots, many of which host regular classes and programs to grow a fledgling hobby and learn more about the sky above.
Burke Lake Park
Burke Lake Parks open fields lend themselves well to stargazing, and on Jan. 21, the parks resident astronomical naturalist will lead acampfirewith a discussionabout stargazing. There, you can learn more about constellations and try outprovided telescopes. //7315 Ox Road, Fairfax Station
C.M. Crockett Park
C.M. Crockett Parks expansive open field is an ideal location to spot constellations, planets, star clusters and galaxies. The Northern Virginia Astronomy Club holds monthly public viewings, and club members and nonmembers of all experience levels are welcome. The next viewing will take place Jan. 28. // 10066 Rogues Road, Midland
David M. Brown Planetarium
Located at the Arlington Schools Education Center, the David M. Brown Planetarium hosts itsStars Tonightprogram on the first Monday of every month at 7:30 p.m. Regular attendeescan track changes in the solar system. //1426 N. Quincy St., Arlington
GMU Observatory
While George Mason Universitys observatory is typically reserved for students, it frequently hosts its Evening Under the Stars program, where participants can look through the schools primary telescope. //George Mason University College of Science: 10401 York River Road, Fairfax
Meadowkirk at Delta Farm
Meadowkirks Brinton Observatory, also partnered with the Northern Virginia Astronomy Club, is an ideal spot check out the night sky, featuring a number of telescopes and regular astronomy programs. There are programs geared toward both children and more experienced stargazers that explore the moon and planets, the greater solar system and constellations and deep space. //38012 Delta Farm Lane, Middleburg
Observatory Park at Turner Farm
Out in Great Falls, you can see the stars from one of the regions darkest locations, and even better, Turner Farmrecently opened a new roll-top observatory that offers programs and equipment for optimal viewing. The Analemma Society helms educational programming at the park, including weekly Fridayobserving sessionsfrom 7:30-9:30 p.m. Participants who stop by this month might just be able to seeVenus, the Andromeda galaxy and the Orion nebula. // 925 Springvale Road, Great Falls
Sky Meadows State Park
Sky Meadows offers a dedicated observing fieldnear the Bleak Hill House for Northern Virginia Astronomy Club members as well as nonmembers, and the parkregularly partners with the National Air and Space Museum for events. // 11012 Edmonds Lane, Delaplane
Continued here:
Posted in Astronomy
Comments Off on Best stargazing spots in Northern Virginia
The Future Of Astronomy: Thousands Of Radio Telescopes That Can See Beyond The Stars – Forbes
Posted: at 7:53 am
Forbes | The Future Of Astronomy: Thousands Of Radio Telescopes That Can See Beyond The Stars Forbes By building bigger telescopes, going to space, and looking from ultraviolet to visible to infrared wavelengths, we can view stars and galaxies as far back as stars and galaxies go. But for millions of years in the Universe, there were no stars, no ... |
Original post:
The Future Of Astronomy: Thousands Of Radio Telescopes That Can See Beyond The Stars - Forbes
Posted in Astronomy
Comments Off on The Future Of Astronomy: Thousands Of Radio Telescopes That Can See Beyond The Stars – Forbes
Jupiter has two new moons – Astronomy Magazine
Posted: at 7:53 am
As if the gas giant wasnt impressive enough, Jupiters already long list of moons has just grown by two.
While on the hunt for Planet X, DTM staff scientist Scott Sheppard, along with David Tholen from the University of Hawaii and Chadwick Trujillo from Northern Arizona University, decided to point their telescopes toward Jupiter. From there, the team could study Jupiter in the foreground while continuing their search for Planet X in the background.
While making those observations, they discovered many lost moons in addition to two new, mile-wide moons theyre calling S/2016 J 1 and S/2017 J 1. The new moons lie about 13 million miles (21 million kilometers) and 15 million miles (24 million kilometers) from Jupiter.
Several of the moons Sheppards team found qualify as lost moons - despite their discovery back in 2003, there was not enough information to define their exact orbits, so astronomers lost track of them as they circled Jupiter. Some moons have been found since that time, but at the beginning of 2016, 14 were still considered lost.
While observing, Sheppard and his team added their data from 2016-2017 to data from 2003 and found five of those lost moons. They will continue observing for another year to see if they can identify the rest of the lost moons; they may find more new moons, too.
In the meantime, after checking their 2016-2017 data against images taken in 2003, the team confirmed that S/2016 J 1 and S/2017 J 1 are previously undiscovered moons, bringing the number of Jupiters moons up to 69.
Follow this link:
Posted in Astronomy
Comments Off on Jupiter has two new moons – Astronomy Magazine
Total eclipse of a planet – Astronomy Magazine
Posted: at 7:53 am
August 21 is the Great American Eclipse the first total solar eclipse in American history exclusive to the US. Elsewhere on Earth, though, a total solar eclipse occurs roughly every 18 months. But what about other planets? Can they happen there?
Mercury No. In a total solar eclipse, a moon slides between a planet and its sun, blocking the suns light and casting a shadow on the world below. But Mercury doesnt have a moon, making eclipses there impossible.
Venus No. Venus doesnt have a moon either. But that doesnt mean there arent eclipses. Venus has planetary eclipses or transits caused by Mercury orbiting between Venus and the Sun. Earth experiences transits, too, every time Mercury or Venus pass between the Sun and Earth. But theyre rare. Mercury and Venus transit Earth 8 years apart, then it takes over a century for the cycle to start over. The next planetary eclipse here on Earth is December 11, 2117.
Mars No. Mars has two moons, Phobos and Deimos, so solar eclipses are totally possible they just arent total. Theyre annular. Just like a total solar eclipse, the moon passes between its planet and the Sun, covering the Suns center. But when a moons too far from the planet to cover the Sun or as with Phobos and Deimos too small, the rest of the Sun sticks out around the sides. See one for yourself in this video Curiosity Rover took on Mars September 13, 2012:
Visit link:
Posted in Astronomy
Comments Off on Total eclipse of a planet – Astronomy Magazine
Shadow raises $57 million for its cloud computing service for … – TechCrunch
Posted: at 7:52 am
French startup Shadow, also known as Blade, just raised a Series A round of $57.1 million (51 million). Shadow thinks your next computer is going to be in a data center. Your existing phones, laptops and Shadows own device (pictured above) act as a thin client, a window into your virtual machine running on a beefy server in a data center near you.
Shadow had already raised $14.6 million from around 20 business angels. The same ones invested again, starting with Nick Suppipat, Pierre-Kosciusko Morizet and Michael Benabou.
Ive already written a bit about Shadow. The startup is running thousands of virtual machines on 800 server-grade Intel Xeon processors with a dedicated Nvidia GTX 1070 for each user. Its only available in France for now.
In my own testing, it works quite well already even though you can feel that the service is still a bit young. The only issue is that you currently need a speedy fiber connection, which still limits the market quite a bit in France.
You can get your personal instance for around $32.70 per month (30). This isnt just a gaming platform, you get a full Windows 10 virtual machine. So far, 3,500 people have been using the service as the company has been accepting new users in batches every other month.
With todays funding round, the company plans to accept a lot more customers. The first thing were going to change is that we were relying on a pre-order system, co-founder and CEO EmmanuelFreund said. We have a lot more demand compared to our offering output. Were going to switch to an instant ordering system.
Eventually, youll be able to sign up to Shadow and use your Shadow computer the next day. This is going to be challenging as Shadow will need to keep up with the demand and roll out enough servers so that new servers are always available.
Shadow already said that it isnt in the business of looking at your data. You control your Windows instance, you can encrypt your data and Shadow doesnt have your Windows password. But the company said that it plans to provide its own encryption system and write stronger terms of service when it comes to privacy.
On average, these users have been spending 2.5 hours per day per user over the last 30 days. By targeting gamers, Shadow has been focusing on heavy PC users so this number isnt that surprising.
But the startup doesnt plan to stop there. Up next, Shadow wants to sell instances through B2B channels and target less powerful needs. Eventually, Shadow wants to replace computers in your office or your grandparents computer. Those servers probably arent going to have a big Nvidia GPU, but its going to bring the next big wave of users.
The startup wants to attract 100,000 clients by the end of 2018. Shadow is going to expand to the U.K. and Germany in 2017, with other European countries following suit. For each geographical expansion, the startup needs to find new data centers and sign peering deals with telecom companies around Europe.
The company is also going to open an office in Palo Alto so that they can talk with American partners, such as server makers and Microsoft. And Im sure that the company will need a ton of capital to buy new servers and expand its infrastructure.
While cloud computing for end users have been a wild dream for years, internet connections may have become fast enough to turn this into something that you can actually use. Shadow plans to take advantage of that.
More:
Shadow raises $57 million for its cloud computing service for ... - TechCrunch
Posted in Cloud Computing
Comments Off on Shadow raises $57 million for its cloud computing service for … – TechCrunch
Bahrain to introduce cloud computing – Bahrain News Agency
Posted: at 7:52 am
07 : 04 PM - 14/06/2017
Deputy Premier, HH Shaikh Ali bin Khalifa Al Khalifa, and Deputy Premier, Deputy Premier Shaikh Khalid bin Abdulla Al Khalifa, and committee members attended the meeting.
The panel reviewed a report on the work of the committee in charge of following up on and implementing the requirements and recommendations of the UN report aiming to enhance Bahrains standing in UN e-Government indicators-2018.
The committee requested all ministries and relevant departments and institutions to finalise the requirements of the e-services index in the allocated time.
It also stressed the need to focus on meeting the requirements of open data, and to provide the e-content pertaining to the sustainable development goals for each ministry, entity or institution on their websites.
In this regard, HH Shaikh Mohammed bin Mubarak commended the efforts of the committee in charge of following up on and implementing the requirements and recommendations of the UN report.
After that, the High ICT committee adopted the Cloud Computing policy, making the kingdom the first Arab country to take such an initiative.
A detailed presentation about cloud computing regarding its methodology, principles and advantages was given.
The cloud computing policy enables government institutions to focus on the development of their services, which will result in their excellence in the provision of such services, elimination of duplicated efforts and reduction of operational expenses in infrastructure to control expenditure.
The deputy premier stressed the need to go ahead with the adoption of cloud computing, given its role in reducing expenditure, ensuring the provision of speedy e-services, expanding the scope of work and increasing flexibility and competitiveness.
He pointed out that keeping pace with technical and technological progress is the basis of the Kingdom's global status in the field of e-government, which should continue in order to provide the best and fastest e-government services at the lowest costs.
The committee also discussed efforts to increase readiness to face cyber security threats, calling for the need to start implementing standards and systems to identify the threats and put in place a government strategy for cyber security.
The committee also approved the guiding principles for implementing the requirements of the law on the protection of the state information and documents. In this regard, the deputy premier stressed that the relevant government departments should start implementing the law, given its importance in preserving the states information and documents.
The committee also reviewed a descriptive research study on customer satisfaction index for e-government programmes conducted in cooperation with the University of Bahrain
WHQ
Number of readings:947 Last updated : 07 : 06 PM - 14/06/2017
The rest is here:
Posted in Cloud Computing
Comments Off on Bahrain to introduce cloud computing – Bahrain News Agency
Angry Birds, qubits and big ideas: Quantum computing is tantalisingly close – The Australian Financial Review
Posted: at 7:52 am
Quantum computing just around the corner: D-Wave Systems processor.
It's a sunny Tuesday morning in late March at IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Centre. The corridor from the reception area follows the long, curving glass curtain-wall that looks out over the visitors' parking lot to leafless trees covering a distant hill in Yorktown Heights, an hour north of Manhattan.
Walk past the podium from the Jeopardy! episodes at which IBM's Watson smote the human champion of the TV quiz show, turn right into a hallway, and you'll enter a windowless lab where a quantum computer is chirping away.
Actually, "chirp" isn't quite the right word. It's a somewhat metallic sound, chush, chush, chush, that's made by the equipment that lowers the temperature inside a so-called dilution refrigerator to within hailing distance of absolute zero. Encapsulated in a white canister suspended from a frame, the dilution refrigerator cools a superconducting chip studded with a handful of quantum bits, or qubits.
Quantum computing has been around, in theory if not in practice, for several decades. But these new types of machines, designed to harness quantum mechanics and potentially process unimaginable amounts of data, are certifiably a big deal.
"I would argue that a working quantum computer is perhaps the most sophisticated technology that humans have ever built," says Chad Rigetti, founder and chief executive of Rigetti Computing, a start-up in Berkeley, California. Quantum computers, he says, harness nature at a level we became aware of only about 100 years ago and one that isn't apparent to us in everyday life.
What's more, the potential of quantum computing is enormous. Tapping into the weird way nature works could potentially speed up computing so some problems that are now intractable to classical computers could finally yield solutions. And maybe not just for chemistry and materials science. With practical breakthroughs in speed on the horizon, Wall Street's antennae are twitching.
The second investment that CME Group's venture arm ever made was in 1QB Information Technologies, a quantum-computing software company in Vancouver.
"From the start at CME Ventures, we've been looking further ahead at transformational innovations and technologies that we think could have an impact on the financial-services industry in the future," says Rumi Morales, head of CME Venture.
That 1QBit financing round, in 2015, was led by Royal Bank of Scotland. Kevin Hanley, RBS's director of innovation, says quantum computing is likely to have the biggest impact on industries that are data-rich and time-sensitive.
"We think financial services is kind of in the cross hairs of that profile," he says.
Goldman Sachs Groupis an investor in D-Wave Systems, another quantum player, as is In-Q-Tel, the CIA-backed venture capital company, says Vern Brownell, CEO of D-Wave. The company makes machines that do something called quantum annealing.
"Quantum annealing is basically using the quantum computer to solve optimisation problems at the lowest level," Brownell says. "We've taken a slightly different approach where we're actually trying to engage with customers, make our computers more and more powerful, and provide this advantage to them in the form of a programmable, usable computer."
Marcos Lpez de Prado, a senior managing director at Guggenheim Partners,who's also a scientific adviser at 1QBit and a research fellow at the USDepartment of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, says it's all about context.
"The reason quantum computing is so exciting is its perfect marriage with machine learning," he says. "I would go as far as to say that currently this is the main application for quantum computing."
Part of that simply derives from the idea of a quantum computer: harnessing a physical device to find an answer, Lpez de Prado says.
He sometimes explains it by pointing to the video game Angry Birds. When you play it on your iPad, the central processing units use some mathematical equations that have been programmed into a library to simulate the effects of gravity and the interaction of objects bouncing and colliding. "This is how digital computers work," he says.
By contrast, quantum computers turn that approach on its head, Lpez de Prado says. The paradigm for quantum computers is this: Let's throw some birds and see what happens. Encode into the quantum microchip this problem: These are your birds and where you throw them from, so what's the optimal trajectory?
"Then you let the computer check all possible solutions essentially or a very large combination of them and come back with an answer," he says.
In a quantum computer, there's no mathematician cracking the problem, he says. "The laws of physics crack the problem for you."
The fundamental building blocks of our world are quantum mechanical. "If you look at a molecule," says Dario Gil, vice-president for science and solutions at IBM Research, "the reason molecules form and are stable is because of the interactions of these electron orbitals. Each calculation in there each orbital is a quantum mechanical calculation."
The number of those calculations, in turn, increases exponentially with the number of electrons you're trying to model. By the time you have 50 electrons, you have 2 to the 50th power calculations, Gil says.
"That's a phenomenally large number, so we can't compute it today," he says. (For the record, it's 1.125 quadrillion. So if you fired up your laptop and started cranking through several calculations a second, it would take a few million years to run through them all.)
Connecting information theory to physics could provide a path to solving such problems, Gil says. A 50-qubit quantum computer might begin to be able to do it.
Landon Downs, president and co-founder of 1QBit, says it's now becoming possible to unlock the computational power of the quantum world.
"This has huge implications for producing new materials or creating new drugs, because we can actually move from a paradigm of discovery to a new era of quantum design," he says in an email. Rigetti, whose company is building hybrid quantum-classical machines, says one moonshot use of quantum computing could be to model catalysts that remove carbon and nitrogen from the atmosphere-and thereby help fix global warming. (Bloomberg Beta, a venture capital unit of Bloomberg, is an investor in Rigetti Computing.)
The quantum-computing community hums with activity and excitement these days. Teams around the world at start-ups, corporations, universitiesand government labs are racing to build machines using a welter of different approaches to process quantum information.
Superconducting qubit chips too elementary for you? How about trapped ions, which have brought together researchers from the University of Maryland and the National Institute of Standards and Technology? Or maybe the topological approach that Microsoftis developing through an international effort called Station Q? The aim is to harness a particle called a non-abelian anyon which has not yet been definitively proven to exist.
These are early days, to be sure. As of late May, the number of quantum computers in the world that clearly, unequivocally do something faster or better than a classical computer remains zero, according to Scott Aaronson, a professor of computer science and director of the Quantum Information Centre at the University of Texas at Austin. Such a signal event would establish "quantum supremacy". In Aaronson's words: "That we don't have yet."
Yet someone may accomplish the feat as soon as this year. Most insiders say one clear favourite is a group at Googleled by John Martinis, a physics professor at the University of California at Santa Barbara. According to Martinis, the group's goal is to achieve supremacy with a 49-qubit chip. As of late May, he says, the team was testing a 22-qubit processor as an intermediate step toward a showdown with a classical supercomputer.
"We are optimistic about this, since prior chips have worked well," he said in an email.
The idea of using quantum mechanics to process information dates back decades. One key event happened in 1981, when International Business Machines. and MIT co-sponsored a conference on the physics of computation at the university's Endicott House. At the conference, Richard Feynman, the famed physicist, proposed building a quantum computer.
"Nature isn't classical, dammit, and if you want to make a simulation of nature, you'd better make it quantum mechanical," he said in his talk. "And by golly, it's a wonderful problem, because it doesn't look so easy."
He got that part right. The basic idea is to take advantage of a couple of the weird properties of the atomic realm: superposition and entanglement. Superposition is the mind-bending observation that a particle can be in two states at the same time. Bring out your ruler to get a measurement, however, and the particle will collapse into one state or the other. And you won't know which until you try, except in terms of probabilities. This effect is what underlies Schrodinger's cat, the thought experiment animal that's both alive and dead in a box until you sneak a peek.
Sure, bending your brain around that one doesn't come especially easy; nothing in everyday life works that way, of course. Yet about 1 million experiments since the early 20th century show that superposition is a thing. And if superposition happens to be your thing, the next step is figuring out how to strap such a crazy concept into a harness.
Enter qubits. Classical bits can be a 0 or a 1; run a string of them together through "logic gates" (AND, OR, NOT, etc.), and you'll multiply numbers, draw an image, and whatnot. A qubit, by contrast, can be a 0, a 1, or both at the same time, says IBM's Gil.
Ready for entanglement? (You're in good company if you balk; Albert Einstein famously rebelled against the idea, calling it "spooky action at a distance".) Well, let's say two qubits were to get entangled; Gil says that would make them perfectly correlated. A quantum computer could then utilise a menagerie of distinctive logic gates. The so-called Hadamard gate, for example, puts a qubit into a state of perfect superposition. (There may be something called a "square root of NOT" gate, but let's take a pass on that one.) If you tap the superposition and entanglement in clever arrangements of the weird quantum gates, you start to get at the potential power of quantum computing.
If you have two qubits, you can explore four states: 00, 01, 10, and 11. (Note that that's 4: 2 raised to the power 2.) "When I perform a logical operation on my quantum computer, I can operate on all of this at once," Gil says. And the number of states you can look at is 2 raised to the power of the number of qubits. So if you could make a 50-qubit universal quantum computer, you could in theory explore all of those 1.125 quadrillion states-at the same time.
What gives quantum computing its special advantage, says Aaronson, of the University of Texas, is that quantum mechanics is based on things called amplitudes. "Amplitudes are sort of like probabilities, but they can also be negative-in fact, they can also be complex numbers," he says. So if you want to know the probability that something will happen, you add up the amplitudes for all the different ways that it can happen, he says.
"The idea with a quantum computation is that you try to choreograph a pattern of interference so that for each wrong answer to your problem, some paths leading there have positive amplitudes and some have negative amplitudes, so they cancel each other out," Aaronson says. "Whereas the paths leading to the right answer all have amplitudes that are in phase with each other."
The tricky part is that you have to arrange everything not knowing in advance which answer is the right one. "So I would say it's the exponentiality of quantum states combined with this potential for interference between positive and negative amplitudes-that's really the source of the power of quantum computing," he says.
Did we mention that there are problems that a classical computer can't solve? You probably harness one such difficulty every day when you use encryption on the internet. The problem is that it's not easy to find the prime factors of a large number.
To review: The prime factors of 15 are 5 and 3. That's easy. If the number you're trying to factor has, say, 200 digits, it's very hard. Even with your laptop running an excellent algorithm, you might have to wait years to find the prime factors.
That brings us to another milestone in quantum computing: Shor's algorithm. Published in 1994 by Peter Shor, now a maths professor at MIT, the algorithm demonstrated an approach that you could use to find the factors of a big number-if you had a quantum computer, which didn't exist at the time. Essentially, Shor's algorithm would perform some operations that would point to the regions of numbers in which the answer was most likely to be found.
The following year, Shor also discovered a way to perform quantum error correction. "Then people really got the idea that, wow, this is a different way of computing things and is more powerful in certain test cases," says Robert Schoelkopf, director of the Yale Quantum Institute and Sterling professor of applied physics and physics.
"Then there was a big up-swelling of interest from the physics community to figure out how you could make quantum bits and logic gates between quantum bits and all of those things."
Two decades later, those things are here.
See the original post:
Posted in Quantum Computing
Comments Off on Angry Birds, qubits and big ideas: Quantum computing is tantalisingly close – The Australian Financial Review







