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Jan 28, 2020
Quantum computing talent war: JPMorgan Chase poaches a top IBM exec
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: business, computing, economics, finance, information science, quantum physics
Editor’s note: Geoff Woollacott is Senior Strategy Consultant and Principal Analyst at Technology Business Research. IBM and NC State are coperating on quantum computing development.
HAMPTON, N.H. – JPMorgan Chase announced on Jan. 22 the hiring of Marco Pistoia from IBM. A 24-year IBM employee with numerous patents to his credit, Pistoia most recently led an IBM team responsible for quantum computing algorithms. Algorithm development will be key to developing soundly engineered quantum computing systems that can deliver the business outcomes enterprises seek at a faster and more accurate pace than current classical computing systems.
A senior hire into a flagship enterprise in the financial services industry is the proverbial canary in the coal mine, as TBR believes such actions suggest our prediction of quantum achieving economic advantage by 2021 remains on target. Quantum executives discuss the three pillars of quantum commercialization as being:
Estimates of the clock and TMRCA for 2019-nCoV based on 27 genomes.
Kristian Andersen, Scripps Research
Jan 28, 2020
DeLorean Comes Clean, Confirms Plan to Produce New DMC 12s
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: law, transportation
Among the hardest games to play, we find the waiting game. The lore of the DeLorean being produced once again has been floating around the watercooler for some time now. Most recently, rumors pointed to 2016 being the return of the DMC 12. However, due to changes in regulations, it would appear as if the revival wouldn’t exactly be legal. Let’s just say that low-volume auto manufacturers have some hurdles to jump over. These regulations would make the hurdles impossible for DeLorean.
That all changed.
Continue reading “DeLorean Comes Clean, Confirms Plan to Produce New DMC 12s” »
Jan 28, 2020
Method detects defects in 2-D materials for future electronics, sensors
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: materials, particle physics
To further shrink electronic devices and to lower energy consumption, the semiconductor industry is interested in using 2-D materials, but manufacturers need a quick and accurate method for detecting defects in these materials to determine if the material is suitable for device manufacture. Now a team of researchers has developed a technique to quickly and sensitively characterize defects in 2-D materials.
Two-dimensional materials are atomically thin, the most well-known being graphene, a single-atom-thick layer of carbon atoms.
“People have struggled to make these 2-D materials without defects,” said Mauricio Terrones, Verne M. Willaman Professor of Physics, Penn State. “That’s the ultimate goal. We want to have a 2-D material on a four-inch wafer with at least an acceptable number of defects, but you want to evaluate it in a quick way.”
Jan 28, 2020
Synthetic Frogs Challenge Science Class Rite of Passage: ‘It Was a Lot Easier and Didn’t Smell as Bad.’
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: education, science
Reusable models that feel like the real thing are shaking up school labs. Cats are also available.
Jan 28, 2020
Mars: viral photo shows what 7 years on the red planet did to Curiosity rover
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
A photo comparison from 2012 and 2019 show what Martian weather has done to the Curiosity rover.
Jan 28, 2020
Americans in Wuhan Prepare to Flee Coronavirus—or Weather Outbreak in Isolated City
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: health
SHANGHAI—Hundreds of Americans were preparing to fly out of Wuhan, bound for California, as fears grew at the epicenter of China’s health crisis. But more U.S. citizens aren’t leaving, having failed to secure a seat on the single U.S.-bound flight—or decided to ride out the emergency where they are.
A State Department evacuation flight promised relief for a segment of Wuhan’s roughly 1,000 Americans, as a lockdown triggered by a coronavirus outbreak turned the focus to the dangers of contagion and a long quarantine in China’s…
To Read the Full Story.
Jan 28, 2020
NASA selects Axiom Space to build commercial space station segment
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
NASA has announced that they have selected Axiom Space, an American company headquartered in Houston, Texas, to design, build and launch three large pressurized modules and a large Earth observation window to the International Space Station (ISS).
This partnership between NASA and Axiom is issued under Appendix I of NASA Next Space Technologies for Exploration Partnerships 2 (NextSTEP-2) public-private partnership program witch the agency hopes will help stimulate commercial development of deep space exploration capabilities.
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