This Week’s Awesome Tech Stories From Around the Web (Through June 4) – Singularity Hub

Posted: June 5, 2022 at 2:36 am

COMPUTING

Manipulating Photons for Microseconds Tops 9,000 Years on a SupercomputerJohn Timmer | Ars TechnicaThanks to some tweaks to the design it described a year ago, [quantum computing startup] Xanadu is now able to sometimes perform operations with more than 200 qubits. And it has shown that simulating the behavior of just one of those operations on a supercomputer would take 9,000 years, while its optical quantum computer can do them in just a few-dozen milliseconds.

Researchers in Japan Just Set a Staggering New Speed Record for Data TransfersAndrew Liszewski | GizmodoResearchers from Japans National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) successfully sent data down a custom multi-core fiber optic cable at a speed of 1.02 petabits per second over a distance of 51.7 km. Thats the equivalent of sending 127,500 GB of data every second, which, according to the researchers, is also enough capacity for over 10 million channels of 8K broadcasting per second.i

California Allows Driverless Taxi Service to Operate in San FranciscoAssociated Press | The GuardianCruise and another robotic car pioneer, Waymo, have already been charging passengers for rides in parts of San Francisco in autonomous vehicles with a backup human driver present to take control if something goes wrong with the technology. But now Cruise has been cleared to charge for rides in vehicles that will have no other people in them besides the passengersan ambition that a wide variety of technology companies and traditional automakers have been pursuing for more than a decade.

With Glass Buried Under Ice, Microsoft Plans to Preserve Music for 10,000 YearsMark Wilson | Fast CompanyLocated in Norway, its part of a cold-storage facility drilled into the very same mountain as the Svalbard Global Seed Vault. While the seed vault protects the earths cache of seeds, the Global Music Vault aims to preserve the sonic arts for generations to come. Dubbed Project Silica, you could oversimplify [Microsofts] technology as something akin to a glass hard drive thats read like a CD. Its a 3-by-3-inch platter that can hold 100GB of digital data, or roughly 20,000 songs, pretty much forever.

How Do You Decide? Cancer Treatments CAR-T Crisis Has Patients Dying on a WaitlistAngus Chen | StatBy the fall of 2021, Patel saw only one possibility left to save Goltzenes lifea newly approved CAR-T cell therapy for myeloma. Its an approach that is transforming treatment of blood cancers: CAR-T therapy labs convert the immune systems T cells into assassins of cancer cells by inserting a gene for whats known as a chimeric antigen receptor. But the process is slow and laborious, and drugmakers simply cant keep up.

How to Make the Universe Think for UsCharlie Wood | QuantaPhysicists are building neural networks out of vibrations, voltages and lasers, arguing that the future of computing lies in exploiting the universes complex physical behaviors. McMahon views his devices as striking, if modest, proof that you dont need a brain or computer chip to think. Any physical system can be a neural network, he said.

AstroForge Aims to Succeed Where Other Asteroid Mining Companies Have FailedEric Berger | Ars Technicathe company plans to build and launch what Gialich characterized as a small spacecraft to a near-Earth asteroid to extract regolith, refine that material, and send it back toward Earth on a ballistic trajectory. It will then fly into Earths atmosphere with a small heat shield and land beneath a parachute. Acain and Gialich, veterans of SpaceX and Virgin Orbit, respectively, readily acknowledge that what theyre proposing is rather audacious. But they believe it is time for commercial companies to begin looking beyond low Earth orbit.

Eavesdropping on the Brain With 10,000 ElectrodesBarun Dutta | IEEE SpectrumVersion 2.0 of the [Neuropixels] system, demonstrated last year, increases the sensor count by about an order of magnitude over that of the initial version produced just four years earlier. It paves the way for future brain-computer interfaces that may enable paralyzed people to communicate at speeds approaching those of normal conversation. With version 3.0 already in early development, we believe that Neuropixels is just at the beginning of a long road of exponential Moores Lawlike growth in capabilities.

This Is What Flying Car Ports Should Look LikeNicole Kobie | WiredIt might be years before flying cars take to the skies, but designers and engineers are already testing the infrastructure theyll need to operate. to hail an air taxi, passengers will need to make their way to a local vertiport, which could sit atop train stations, office blocks, or even float in water. Figuring out exactly what these buildings will require isnt simple. Urban-Air worked with Coventry University on a virtual reality model to test the space before spending 11 weeks assembling Air One, [Urban-Air Ports 1,700-square-meter modular popup building].

Image Credit:Bryan Colosky / Unsplash

See more here:

This Week's Awesome Tech Stories From Around the Web (Through June 4) - Singularity Hub

Related Posts