Archive for the ‘computing’ category: Page 730
Jul 21, 2016
Engineered bacteria are helping us add memory to living computers
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: computing
Bacteria improving technology.
New research shows how adding memory to bacterial circuits could help us harness their computing power.
Jul 21, 2016
From the lab: Better biomaterials for medical implants
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, computing
Wanted to share because I found this extremely interesting in what we’re discovery on implants and cells. I predict we are going to find out that in the next 7 to 10 years that we had some key things wrong as well as learned some new amazing things about cells especially with the synthetic cell & cell circuitry work that is happening for bio computing.
By Bikramjit Basu & his group Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore
For a variety of medical treatments these days, artificial, synthetic materials are inserted into the human body. Common examples include treatment for artery blockage and orthopaedic surgeries, like hip and knee replacements. Human bodies are not very receptive to foreign objects; most synthetic materials are rejected by the body. The choice of material that can be inserted, therefore, has to be very specific.
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Jul 21, 2016
Scientists Built a Biological Computer Inside a Cell
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, computing
Building bio/ living computers in cells to combat diseases such as cancer, etc. as well as advance our evolution track towards sincularity.
Chemically hacking bacterial DNA allows for a whole new world of biological computation.
Jul 21, 2016
Researchers make leap in measuring quantum states
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, quantum physics
Another major leap forward in controlling system noise in QC.
A breakthrough into the full characterisation of quantum states has been published today as a Editors’ Suggestion in the journal Physical Review Letters.
The full characterisation (tomography) of quantum states is a necessity for future quantum computing. However, standard techniques are inadequate for the large quantum bit-strings necessary in full scale quantum computers.
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Jul 21, 2016
World’s most powerful quantum computer now online at USC
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, information science, quantum physics, robotics/AI
Good for USC.
Following a recent upgrade, the USC-Lockheed Martin Quantum Computing Center (QCC) based at the USC Information Sciences Institute (ISI) is now the leader in quantum processing capacity.
With the upgrade — to 1,098 qubits from 512 — the D-Wave 2X™ processor is enabling QCC researchers to continue their efforts to close the gap between academic research in quantum computation and real-world critical problems.
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Jul 21, 2016
Carbon Nanospheres Overcome Electron Spin Decoherence
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, quantum physics
Another spin on spin in QC.
Monitoring electron spins for a prolonged time period poses to be a major barrier in quantum computing. Scientists from EPFL have discovered the possibility of carbon nanospheres to overcome such barriers, even at room temperature.
Jul 20, 2016
Atom-scale storage holds 62TB in a square inch
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: computing, mobile phones, particle physics
Storage tech doesn’t get much better than this. Scientists at TU Delft have developed a technique that uses chlorine atom positions as data bits, letting the team fit 1KB of information into an area just 100 nanometers wide. That may not sound like much, but it amounts to a whopping 62.5TB per square inch — about 500 times denser than the best hard drives. The scientists coded their data by using a scanning tunneling microscope to shuffle the chlorine atoms around a surface of copper atoms, creating data blocks where QR code -style markers indicate both their location and whether or not they’re in good condition.
Not surprisingly, the technology isn’t quite ready for prime time. At the moment, this storage only works in extremely clean conditions, and then only in extreme cold (77 kelvin, or −321F). However, the approach can easily scale to large data sizes, even if the copper is flawed. Researchers suspect that it’s just a matter of time before their storage works in normal conditions. If and when it does, you could see gigantic capacities even in the smallest devices you own — your phone could hold dozens of terabytes in a single chip.
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Jul 20, 2016
Killer ‘legobots’ are coming: US Military to build brickbots
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, drones, military
Plug and play is preparing to launch.
DARPA hopes to shrink traditional military machines into single ‘chiplets’ to build a library of components to aid everything from smart drone building to instant language translation. Shown, an artist’s impression of the components that could be shrunk onto a single chip.
Jul 20, 2016
One of the First Real-World Quantum Computer Applications Was Just Realized
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, engineering, quantum physics
Luv it; and this is only the beginning too.
In the continued effort to make a viable quantum computer, scientists assert that they have made the first scalable quantum simulation of a molecule.
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