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May 10, 2017
The UN Could Help 80 Million People Each Year With Blockchain
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: bitcoin, computing, cryptocurrencies, food, transportation
- The UN will be using the blockchain Ethereum to distribute funds from the World Food Program to more than 10,000 people in Jordan this summer.
- The computer network is making humanitarian giving simpler and more secure than ever.
Technology has the power to improve people’s lives — and not just by supplying flying cars to millionaires. The computer networks that brought us Bitcoins are advancing in ways that will make humanitarian giving simpler and more secure than ever.
May 10, 2017
New Research Shows That Time Travel Is Mathematically Possible
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: mathematics, time travel
May 10, 2017
Scientists are turning Alexa into an automated lab helper
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: futurism, robotics/AI
Intelligent Machines
Scientists Are Turning Alexa into an Automated Lab Helper.
Amazon’s voice-activated assistant follows a rich tradition of researchers using consumer tech in unintended ways to further their work.
Continue reading “Scientists are turning Alexa into an automated lab helper” »
May 10, 2017
Blockchain Tech Has Never Been More Valuable or More Ready for World Domination
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: bitcoin, computing, cryptocurrencies
Blockchain, which serves as the underlying infrastructure for Bitcoin, is form of cryptocurrency that has become increasingly popular and experienced all-time high values in the last few months. One blockchain developer, Ethereum, has seen an all-time high in value: in recent weeks it’s topped out trading at over $40 per share.
May 10, 2017
Researchers achieve direct counterfactual quantum communication
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: particle physics, quantum physics
(Phys.org)—In the non-intuitive quantum domain, the phenomenon of counterfactuality is defined as the transfer of a quantum state from one site to another without any quantum or classical particle transmitted between them. Counterfactuality requires a quantum channel between sites, which means that there exists a tiny probability that a quantum particle will cross the channel—in that event, the run of the system is discarded and a new one begins. It works because of the wave-particle duality that is fundamental to particle physics: Particles can be described by wave function alone.
Well understood as a workable scheme by physicists, theoretical aspects of counterfactual communication have appeared in journals, but until recently, there have been no practical demonstrations of the phenomenon. Now, a collaborative of Chinese scientists has designed and experimentally tested a counterfactual communication system that successfully transferred a monochrome bitmap from one location to another using a nested version of the quantum Zeno effect. They have reported their results in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The quantum Zeno effect occurs when an unstable quantum system is subjected to a series of weak measurements. Unstable particles can never decay while they are being measured, and the system is effectively frozen with a very high probability. This is one of the implications of the well known but highly non-intuitive principle that looking at something changes it in the quantum realm.
May 10, 2017
Here’s SpaceX’s Ambitious Plan to Get the World on the Internet
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: internet, space travel
May 10, 2017
Unbreakable quantum entanglement
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: particle physics, quantum physics, space
Einstein’s “spooky action at a distance” persists even at high accelerations, researchers of the Austrian Academy of Sciences and the University of Vienna were able to show in a new experiment. A source of entangled photon pairs was exposed to massive stress: The photons’ entanglement survived the drop in a fall tower as well as 30 times the Earth’s gravitational acceleration in a centrifuge. This was reported in the most recent issue of Nature Communications. The experiment helps deepen our understanding of quantum mechanics and at the same time gives valuable results for quantum experiments in space.
Einstein’s theory of relativity and the theory of quantum mechanics are two important pillars of modern physics. On the way of achieving a “Theory of Everything,” these two theories have to be unified. This has not been achieved as of today, since phenomena of both theories can hardly be observed simultaneously. A typical example of a quantum mechanical phenomenon is entanglement: This means that the measurement of one of a pair of light particles, so-called photons, defines the state of the other particle immediately, regardless of their separation. High accelerations on the other hand can best be described by the theory of relativity. Now for the first time, quantum technologies enable us to observe these phenomena at once: The stability of quantum mechanical entanglement of photon pairs can be tested while the photons undergo relativistically relevant acceleration.
May 10, 2017
This AI Company Offers Cryogenic Freezing With Its Health Plan
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: biotech/medical, cryonics, employment, health, life extension, robotics/AI
Staff members who die will be put in cold storage until medical science can revive them.
Since congressional Republicans voted in a bill containing the Trump administration’s roll back of the Affordable Care Act, healthcare is once again a topic on everyone’s lips. In the absence of any universal healthcare scheme, employer-provided medical coverage is a crucial benefit for employees, tempting people to stay at jobs they might otherwise have left, or apply for positions they wouldn’t otherwise consider.
In the contest to attract new hires, tech companies often supplement already generous salaries with comprehensive benefit packages, and in this vein one company has hit on a novel idea: A health plan that covers its employees beyond death and into the realms of a speculative future rebirth.
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May 10, 2017
On board a racing drone for a tour of the CERN Data Centre
Posted by Roman Mednitzer in categories: computing, drones
Watch footage from when world champion drone pilot Chad Novak took off in CERN Data Centre.
Video produced by: CERN Video Productions
Director: Mike Struik
Camera: Chad Nowak
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