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Quantum Computing · LondonTechnology acceleration happens fast: One day, your work phone is a Blackberry. The next day, it’s an iPhone. And the next, there’s a quantum computer — looking like a golden robot jellyfish from the future — seated next to you running the trading desk. We’re not there yet, but we’re getting closer. British bank HSBC said Thursday that it ran a test with computing giant IBM to see how one of the state-of-the-art computers would perform as a bond…See the Story
HSBC, IBM See Potential for Bond-Trading Bonanza in Quantum Test Results
Coverage: 2 sources

Denmark · DenmarkIf there’s one law of physics that seems easy to grasp, it’s the second law of thermodynamics: Heat flows spontaneously from hotter bodies to colder ones. But now, gently and almost casually, Alexssandre de Oliveira Jr. has just shown me I didn’t truly understand it at all. Take this hot cup of coffee and this cold jug of milk, the Brazilian physicist said as we sat in a café in Copenhagen. SourceSee the Story
A Thermometer for Measuring Quantumness
100% Center coverage: 1 sources

Madrid, Spain · MadridFrom Santiago Ramón y Cajal’s hand came branches and whorls, spines and webs. Now-famous drawings by the neuroanatomist in the late 19th and early 20th centuries showed, for the first time, the distinctiveness and diversity of the fundamental building blocks of the mammalian brain that we call neurons. In the century or so since, his successors have painstakingly worked to count, track, identify… SourceSee the Story
How the Brain Balances Excitation and Inhibition
100% Center coverage: 1 sources