Turning the Body Into a Wire - IEEE Spectrum
Itinerant Quantum Integers: The Language of Quantum Computers
Predicting research trends with semantic and neural networks with an application in quantum physics | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
The First Room-Temperature Ambient-Pressure Superconductor
The First Room-Temperature Ambient-Pressure Superconductor
Quantum compression with classically simulatable circuits
Quantum Neural Network Compression
Quantum Current and Holographic Categorical Symmetry
Sensors, Vol. 23, Pages 4852: Secure and Reliable Big-Data-Based Decision Making Using Quantum Approach in IIoT Systems
Is winter coming? Quantum computing’s trajectory in the years ahead
The Rise of Quantum Computing
Quantum computing funding remains strong, but talent gap raises concern
Space 2023: The Final Fintech Cybersecurity Frontier?
Quantifying quantum causal influences
The Coming Transformation Of Encryption Standards
Defying the Dark Arts: Strategies for Countering Cyber Threats
Quantum 'yin-yang' shows two photons being entangled in real-time
Unveiling the Magic of Signal Processing: Transforming Data into Insights | LinkedIn
NIST to Standardize Encryption Algorithms That Can Resist Attack by Quantum Computers | NIST
Change Management And The Great Cryptographic Migration Ahead
The Case Against Quantum Computing
The Princeton Companion to Mathematics
Can an ancient board game solve quantum problems?
How Quantum Safe Is Your Business?
Jeroen van der Most on LinkedIn: Wave structure of 8000 beads with strings. Neko's Nebula is a work by… | 21 comments
ULTRARAM may be a silly name but it's the holy grail for memory tech and means your PC could hibernate for over 1,000 years
"ULTRARAM is a charge-based memory that stores data by moving electrons into or out of a so-called 'floating gate'. The charge state of the floating gate is read non-destructively by measuring the conductance of an underlying 'channel'. The final component of the memory is the barrier that acts like a 'lock' to retain electrons in the floating gate during data retention. The barrier is unlocked to allow charge to flow when the memory is being written or erased."
Quantum Village
The Superconductor Sensation Has Fizzled, and That’s Fine
All of LK-99’s bizarre behavior that hinted at superconductivity—such as its partial levitation over a magnet—can apparently be explained away by odd but distinctly nonsuperconductive properties, such as ferromagnetism, the same structural quirk that allows magnetic fields to permeate iron and reconfigure the metal’s electrons.
The Bitcoin's cryptographic labyrinth
Using quantum computing to protect AI from attack
Move Over, Silicon; Here Come Quantum Bismuth Chips