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Nov 29, 2017

Key component to scale up quantum computing

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

A team at the University of Sydney and Microsoft, in collaboration with Stanford University in the US, has miniaturised a component that is essential for the scale-up of quantum computing. The work constitutes the first practical application of a new phase of matter, first discovered in 2006, the so-called topological insulators.

Beyond the familiar phases of matter — solid, liquid, or gas — are materials that operate as insulators in the bulk of their structures but have surfaces that act as conductors. Manipulation of these materials provide a pathway to construct the circuitry needed for the interaction between and classical systems, vital for building a practical quantum .

Theoretical work underpinning the discovery of this new phase of matter was awarded the 2016 Nobel Prize in Physics.

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Nov 29, 2017

Artificial muscles give soft robots superpowers

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, robotics/AI

By Lindsay Brownell

(CAMBRIDGE, Mass.) — Soft robotics has made leaps and bounds over the last decade as researchers around the world have experimented with different materials and designs to allow once rigid, jerky machines to bend and flex in ways that mimic and can interact more naturally with living organisms. However, increased flexibility and dexterity has a trade-off of reduced strength, as softer materials are generally not as strong or resilient as inflexible ones, which limits their use.

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Nov 29, 2017

The Hydroponic, Robotic Future of Farming in Greenhouses

Posted by in categories: food, robotics/AI

In a Silicon Valley office park, a startup is developing a system that could automate greenhouse farming and help feed the world.

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Nov 29, 2017

Sony’s Robot Dog “Aibo” Is Back With High-Tech Tricks

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

This robot dog has deep learning capabilities which allow it to recognize faces, understand commands, and each unit can even develop its own “personality.”

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Nov 29, 2017

This breakthrough quantum encryption tool could make the web “hack-proof”

Posted by in categories: encryption, internet, quantum physics

Researchers have doubled the speed at which quantum distribution keys can be transmitted.

Science.

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Nov 29, 2017

Superconducting qubit 3D integration prospects bolstered

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Researchers from Google and the University of California Santa Barbara have taken an important step towards the goal of building a large-scale quantum computer.

Writing in the journal Quantum Science and Technology, they present a new process for creating superconducting interconnects, which are compatible with existing superconducting .

The race to develop the first large-scale error-corrected quantum computer is extremely competitive, and the process itself is complex. Whereas classical computers encode data into binary digits (bits) that exist in one of two states, a quantum computer stores information in quantum bits (qubits) that may be entangled with each other and placed in a superposition of both states simultaneously.

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Nov 29, 2017

New Semi-Synthetic Organism Can Make Molecules We’ve Never Seen Before

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical

Scientists have expanded the building blocks of DNA to create a stable semi-synthetic organism that can produce biological compounds entirely new to nature.

The DNA that makes up essentially all living things on Earth consists of arrangements of four basic nucleotides, but the new life-form developed by researchers in the US makes use of six – and that’s where things get interesting.

The semi-synthetic organism (SSO) engineered by a team at the Scripps Research Institute in California is made from the same four regular nucleobases as you and I – adenine (A), cytosine ©, guanine (G), and thymine (T) – but it’s also got two unnatural nucleotides to call upon.

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Nov 29, 2017

In autism, too many brain connections may be at root of condition

Posted by in categories: genetics, neuroscience

Mutations in a gene linked to autism in people causes neurons to form too many connections in rodents, according to a new study. The findings suggest that malfunctions in communication between brain cells could be at the root of autism.

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Nov 29, 2017

American Airlines working to fix glitch that left thousands of holiday flights without pilots

Posted by in category: futurism

: your source for breaking news and analysis for Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas and around the world. Read it here, first.

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Nov 29, 2017

Will 3D printing replicate human life?

Posted by in category: 3D printing

Panellists debate about using technology to enhance human life.

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Suchitra Bajpai Chaudhary, Senior Reporter.

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