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Are We Close To Realising A Quantum Computer? Yes And No, Quantum Style – Swarajya

Scientists have been hard at work to get a new kind of computer going for about a couple of decades. This new variety is not a simple upgrade over what you and I use every day. It is different. They call it a quantum computer.

The name doesnt leave much to the imagination. It is a machine based on the central tenets of the most successful theory of physics yet devised quantum mechanics. And since it is based on such a powerful theory, it promises to be so advanced that a conventional computer, the one we know and recognise, cannot keep up with it.

Think of the complex real-world problems that are hard to solve and its likely that quantum computers will throw up answers to them someday. Examples include simulating complex molecules to design new materials, making better forecasts for weather, earthquakes or volcanoes, map out the reaches of the universe, and, yes, demystify quantum mechanics itself.

One of the major goals of quantum computers is to simulate a quantum system. It is probably the reason why quantum computation is becoming a major reality, says Dr Arindam Ghosh, professor at the Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Science.

Given that the quantum computer is full of promise, and work on it has been underway for decades, its fair to ask do we have one yet?

This is a million-dollar question, and there is no simple answer to it, says Dr Rajamani Vijayaraghavan, the head of the Quantum Measurement and Control Laboratory at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR). Depending on how you view it, we already have a quantum computer, or we will have one in the future if the aim is to have one that is practical or commercial in nature.

We have it and dont. That sounds about quantum.

In the United States, Google has been setting new benchmarks in quantum computing.

Last year, in October, it declared quantum supremacy a demonstration of a quantum computers superiority over its classical counterpart. Googles Sycamore processor took 200 seconds to make a calculation that, the company claims, would have taken 10,000 years on the worlds most powerful supercomputer.

This accomplishment came with conditions attached. IBM, whose supercomputer Summit (the worlds fastest) came second-best to Sycamore, contested the 10,000-year claim and said that the calculation would have instead taken two and a half days with a tweak to how the supercomputer approached the task.

Some experts suggested that the nature of the task, generating random numbers in a quantum way, was not particularly suited to the classical machine. Besides, Googles quantum processor didnt dabble in a real-world application.

Yet, Google was on to something. For even the harsh critic, it provided a glimpse of the spectacular processing power of a quantum computer and whats possible down the road.

Google did one better recently. They simulated a chemical reaction on their quantum computer the rearrangement of hydrogen atoms around nitrogen atoms in a diazene molecule (nitrogen hydride or N2H2).

The reaction was a simple one, but it opened the doors to simulating more complex molecules in the future an eager expectation from a quantum computer.

But how do we get there? That would require scaling up the system. More precisely, the number of qubits in the machine would have to increase.

Short for quantum bits, qubits are the basic building blocks of quantum computers. They are equivalent to the classical binary bits, zero and one, but with an important difference. While the classical bits can assume states of zero or one, quantum bits can accommodate both zero and one at the same time a principle in quantum mechanics called superposition.

Similarly, quantum bits can be entangled. That is when two qubits in superposition are bound in such a way that one dictates the state of the other. It is what Albert Einstein in his lifetime described, and dismissed, as spooky action at a distance.

Qubits in these counterintuitive states are what allow a quantum computer to work its magic.

Presently, the most qubits, 72, are found on a Google device. The Sycamore processor, the Google chip behind the simulation of a chemical reaction, has a 53-qubit configuration. IBM has 53 qubits too, and Intel has 49. Some of the academic labs working with quantum computing technology, such as the one at Harvard, have about 40-50 qubits. In China, researchers say they are on course to develop a 60-qubit quantum computing system within this year.

The grouping is evident. The convergence is, more or less, around 50-60 qubits. That puts us in an interesting place. About 50 qubits can be considered the breakeven point the one where the classical computer struggles to keep up with its quantum counterpart, says Dr Vijayaraghavan.

It is generally acknowledged that once qubits rise to about 100, the classical computer gets left behind entirely. That stage is not far away. According to Dr Ghosh of IISc, the rate of qubit increase is today faster than the development of electronics in the early days.

Over the next couple of years, we can get to 100-200 qubits, Dr Vijayaraghavan says.

A few more years later, we could possibly reach 300 qubits. For a perspective on how high that is, this is what Harvard Quantum Initiative co-director Mikhail Lukin has said about such a machine: If you had a system of 300 qubits, you could store and process more bits of information than the number of particles in the universe.

In Indian labs, we are working with much fewer qubits. There is some catching up to do. Typically, India is slow to get off the blocks to pursue frontier research. But the good news is that over the years, the pace is picking up, especially in the quantum area.

At TIFR, researchers have developed a unique three-qubit trimon quantum processor. Three qubits might seem small in comparison to examples cited earlier, but together they pack a punch. We have shown that for certain types of algorithms, our three-qubit processor does better than the IBM machine. It turns out that some gate operations are more efficient on our system than the IBM one, says Dr Vijayaraghavan.

The special ingredient of the trimon processor is three well-connected qubits rather than three individual qubits a subtle but important difference.

Dr Vijayaraghavan plans to build more of these trimon quantum processors going forward, hoping that the advantages of a single trimon system spill over on to the larger machines.

TIFR is simultaneously developing a conventional seven-qubit transmon (as opposed to trimon) system. It is expected to be ready in about one and a half years.

About a thousand kilometres south, at IISc, two labs under the Department of Instrumentation and Applied Physics are developing quantum processors too, with allied research underway in the Departments of Computer Science and Automation, and Physics, as well as the Centre for Nano Science and Engineering.

IISc plans to develop an eight-qubit superconducting processor within three years.

Once we have the know-how to build a working eight-qubit processor, scaling it up to tens of qubits in the future is easier, as it is then a matter of engineering progression, says Dr Ghosh, who is associated with the Quantum Materials and Devices Group at IISc.

It is not hard to imagine India catching up with the more advanced players in the quantum field this decade. The key is to not think of India building the biggest or the best machine it is not necessary that they have the most number of qubits. Little scientific breakthroughs that have the power to move the quantum dial decisively forward can come from any lab in India.

Zooming out to a global point of view, the trajectory of quantum computing is hazy beyond a few years. We have been talking about qubits in the hundreds, but, to have commercial relevance, a quantum computer needs to have lakhs of qubits in its armoury. That is the challenge, and a mighty big one.

It isnt even the case that simply piling up qubits will do the job. As the number of qubits go up in a system, it needs to be ensured that they are stable, highly connected, and error-free. This is because qubits cannot hang on to their quantum states in the event of environmental noise such as heat or stray atoms or molecules. In fact, that is the reason quantum computers are operated at temperatures in the range of a few millikelvin to a kelvin. The slightest disturbance can knock the qubits off their quantum states of superposition and entanglement, leaving them to operate as classical bits.

If you are trying to simulate a quantum system, thats no good.

For that reason, even if the qubits are few, quantum computation can work well if the qubits are highly connected and error-free.

Companies like Honeywell and IBM are, therefore, looking beyond the number of qubits and instead eyeing a parameter called quantum volume.

Honeywell claimed earlier this year that they had the worlds highest performing quantum computer on the basis of quantum volume, even though it had just six qubits.

Dr Ghosh says quantum volume is indeed an important metric. Number of qubits alone is not the benchmark. You do need enough of them to do meaningful computation, but you need to look at quantum volume, which measures the length and complexity of quantum circuits. The higher the quantum volume, the higher is the potential for solving real-world problems.

It comes down to error correction. Dr Vijayaraghavan says none of the big quantum machines in the US today use error-correction technology. If that can be demonstrated over the next five years, it would count as a real breakthrough, he says.

Guarding the system against faults or "errors" is the focus of researchers now as they look to scale up the qubits in a system. Developing a system with hundreds of thousands of qubits without correcting for errors cancels the benefits of a quantum computer.

As is the case with any research in the frontier areas, progress will have to accompany scientific breakthroughs across several different fields, from software to physics to materials science and engineering.

In light of that, collaboration between academia and industry is going to play a major role going forward. Depending on each of their strengths, academic labs can focus on supplying the core expertise necessary to get a quantum computer going while the industry can provide the engineering muscle to build the intricate stuff. Both are important parts of the quantum computing puzzle. At the end of the day, the quantum part of a quantum computer is tiny. Most of the machine is high-end electronics. The industry can support that.

It is useful to recall at this point that even our conventional computers took decades to develop, starting from the first transistor in 1947 to the first microprocessor in 1971. The computers that we use today would be unrecognisable to people in the 1970s. In the same way, how quantum computing in the future, say, 20 years down the line, is unknown to us today.

However, governments around the world, including India, are putting their weight behind the development of quantum technology. It is clear to see why. Hopefully, this decade can be the springboard that launches quantum computing higher than ever before. All signs point to it.

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Are We Close To Realising A Quantum Computer? Yes And No, Quantum Style - Swarajya

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Spin-Based Quantum Computing Breakthrough: Physicists Achieve Tunable Spin Wave Excitation – SciTechDaily

Magnon excitation. Credit: Daria Sokol/MIPT Press Office

Physicists from MIPT and the Russian Quantum Center, joined by colleagues from Saratov State University and Michigan Technological University, have demonstrated new methods forcontrolling spin waves in nanostructured bismuth iron garnet films via short laser pulses. Presented inNano Letters, the solution has potential for applications in energy-efficient information transfer and spin-based quantum computing.

Aparticles spin is its intrinsic angular momentum, which always has a direction. Inmagnetized materials, the spins all point in one direction. A local disruption of this magnetic order is accompanied by the propagation of spin waves, whose quanta are known as magnons.

Unlike the electrical current, spin wave propagation does not involve a transfer of matter. Asaresult, using magnons rather than electrons to transmit information leads to much smaller thermal losses. Data can be encoded in the phase or amplitude of a spin wave and processed via wave interference or nonlinear effects.

Simple logical components based on magnons are already available as sample devices. However, one of the challenges of implementing this new technology is the need to control certain spin wave parameters. Inmany regards, exciting magnons optically is more convenient than by other means, with one of the advantages presented in the recent paper in Nano Letters.

The researchers excited spin waves in a nanostructured bismuth iron garnet. Even without nanopatterning, that material has unique optomagnetic properties. It is characterized by low magnetic attenuation, allowing magnons topropagate over large distances even at room temperature. It is also highly optically transparent in the near infrared range and has a high Verdet constant.

The film used in the study had an elaborate structure: a smooth lower layer with a one-dimensional grating formed on top, with a 450-nanometer period (fig.1). This geometry enables the excitation ofmagnons with a very specific spin distribution, which is not possible for an unmodified film.

To excite magnetization precession, the team used linearly polarized pump laser pulses, whose characteristics affected spin dynamics and the type of spin waves generated. Importantly, wave excitation resulted from optomagnetic rather than thermal effects.

Schematic representation of spin wave excitation by optical pulses. The laser pump pulse generates magnons by locally disrupting the ordering of spins shown as violet arrows in bismuth iron garnet (BiIG). A probe pulse is then used to recover information about the excited magnons. GGG denotes gadolinium gallium garnet, which serves as the substrate. Credit: Alexander Chernov et al./Nano Letters

The researchers relied on 250-femtosecond probe pulses to track the state of the sample and extract spin wave characteristics. Aprobe pulse can be directed to any point on the sample with adesired delay relative to the pump pulse. This yields information about the magnetization dynamics in a given point, which can be processed to determine the spin waves spectral frequency, type, and other parameters.

Unlike the previously available methods, the new approach enables controlling the generated wave by varying several parameters of the laser pulse that excites it. In addition to that, thegeometry of the nanostructured film allows the excitation center to be localized inaspot about 10 nanometers in size. The nanopattern also makes it possible to generate multiple distinct types of spin waves. The angle of incidence, the wavelength and polarization of the laser pulses enable the resonant excitation of the waveguide modes of the sample, which are determined by the nanostructure characteristics, so the type of spin waves excited can be controlled. It is possible for each of the characteristics associated with optical excitation to be varied independently to produce the desired effect.

Nanophotonics opens up new possibilities in the area of ultrafast magnetism, said the studys co-author, Alexander Chernov, who heads the Magnetic Heterostructures and Spintronics Lab at MIPT. The creation of practical applications will depend on being able to go beyond the submicrometer scale, increasing operation speed and the capacity for multitasking. We have shown a way to overcome these limitations by nanostructuring a magnetic material. We have successfully localized light in a spot few tens of nanometers across and effectively excited standing spin waves of various orders. This type of spin waves enables the devices operating at high frequencies, up to the terahertz range.

The paper experimentally demonstrates an improved launch efficiency and ability to control spin dynamics under optical excitation by short laser pulses in a specially designed nanopatterned film of bismuth iron garnet. It opens up new prospects for magnetic data processing and quantum computing based on coherent spin oscillations.

Reference: All-Dielectric Nanophotonics Enables Tunable Excitation of the Exchange Spin Waves by Alexander I. Chernov*, Mikhail A. Kozhaev, Daria O. Ignatyeva, Evgeniy N. Beginin, Alexandr V. Sadovnikov, Andrey A. Voronov, Dolendra Karki, Miguel Levy and Vladimir I. Belotelov, 9 June 2020, Nano Letters.DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01528

The study was supported by the Russian Ministry of Science and Higher Education.

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NSF and DOE to Advance Industries of the Future – ARC Viewpoints

The US National Science Foundation (NSF), Department of Energy (DOE), and the White House, announced more than $1 billion in awards for the establishment of 12 new AI and QIS research and development (R&D) institutes nationwide.

Together, NSFs AI Research Institutes and DOEs QIS Research Centers will serve as national R&D hubs for these critical industries of the future, spurring innovation, supporting regional economic growth, and training the next generation workforce.

The NSF and additional Federal partners are awarding $140 million over five years to a total of seven NSF-led AI Research Institutes. These collaborative research and education institutes will focus on a range of AI R&D areas, such as machine-learning, synthetic manufacturing, precision agriculture, and forecasting prediction. Research will take place at universities around the country, including the University of Oklahoma at Norman, the University of Texas at Austin, the University of Colorado at Boulder, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the University of California at Davis, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

NSF anticipates making additional AI Research Institute awards in the coming years, with more than $300 million in total awards, including contributions from partner agencies, expected by next summer. Overall, NSF invests more than $500 million in artificial intelligence activities annually and is the largest Federal driver of nondefense AI R&D.

To establish the QIS Research Centers, DOE is announcing up to $625 million over five years to five centers that will be led by DOE National Laboratory teams at Argonne, Brookhaven, Fermi, Oak Ridge, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratories. Each QIS Center will incorporate a collaborative research team spanning multiple institutions as well as scientific and engineering disciplines. The private sector and academia will be providing another $300 million in contributions for the centers. The centers will focus on a range of key QIS research topics, including quantum networking, sensing, computing, and materials manufacturing.

The establishment of these new national AI and QIS institutes will not only accelerate discovery and innovation but will also promote job creation and workforce development. NSFs AI Research Institutes and DOES QIS Research Centers will include a strong emphasis on training, education, and outreach to help Americans of all backgrounds, ages, and skill levels participate in the 21st-century economy.

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Global Quantum Computing Market 2025 To Expect Maximum Benefit and Growth Potential During this COVID 19 Outbreak: D-Wave Systems, Google, IBM, Intel,…

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Deep Dive: What would it take to change UNCW’s mind? [Free] – Port City Daily

An empty lawn with socially-distanced Adirondack chairs. (Port City Daily photo / Preston Lennon)

Editors note: Haley, a UNCW student interviewed for this article, asked that only her first name be used because she fears stigmatization due to her positive Covid-19 test.

WILMINGTON Haley drove to Raleigh in mid-July to see her mother, who was hospitalized in an intensive care unit with an illness unrelated to the coronavirus. She followed the hospitals safety guidelines, and other than that trip, she said her only excursions in the prior days had been a one-time grocery run and work shifts at a veterinary clinic.

Three days after visiting her mother, Haley woke up with a fever, then suffered from chills and intense chest pain in the following days. She called the campus health clinic at UNCW, where she is a student, and told them she needed a Covid-19 test.

Eight days after Haley was tested, a doctor called to inform her she was Covid-19 positive. The doctor believed she got the virus while visiting her mother in Raleigh, but contact tracers thought it was more likely she was exposed in New Hanover County, Haley said.

I was feeling a lot of guilt. I was freaking out thinking that I had infected so many people, Haley said. Thats the part that has been really scary, is I thought I was doing everything right but still ended up with it.

Haley was diagnosed in late July, when UNCW had only a handful of positive cases on its radar. Since July, UNCW has reported 323 positive cases among students, and 10 cases among faculty and staff; most are recent, with 273 student cases and 7 faculty cases still active.

In the past month, three N.C. universities East Carolina University, UNC-Chapel Hill, and N.C. State University have bailed on in-person instruction for at least the foreseeable future, converting to an online-only class structure. Despite persistent criticism from the student body, and apparently being on the same track for increasing Covid-19 cases, UNCW currently has no official plans to make a similar decision.

In the week leading up to UNC-CHs campus closure decision on Aug. 17, UNC-CH reported 166 new cases; in the week of Aug. 31-Sept. 7, UNCW reported 158 new cases (and then over 50 more since then). UNC-CH had reported four clusters of concentrated cases at the time of its announcement. To date, UNCW has reported six clusters.

UNCW began classes on Aug. 19, nine days later than Chapel Hill, and its undergraduate population is at around 14,650 students, which clocks in at around 76 percent of Chapel Hills undergraduate population.

Haleys work shift at the veterinary clinic last weekend ended late in the night, and on the way back to her off-campus house, she saw a bunch of wicked young college kids, just all parking their cars along the streets, making their way into house parties outside the boundaries of campus, she said.

I feel like a lot of people dont know how easily you can get it, because I thought I was doing everything right, and then I still got it, Haley said. Im very worried for all of the students who are on campus right now, because I dont feel like they are going to be as efficient and proactive in trying to make sure that theyre not getting this virus.

Next week, the university will mandate the wearing of masks in all public spaces, said Chancellor Jose Sartarelli on a Zoom call with faculty.

Throughout the summer, UNCW officials were communicating with leaders at the New Hanover County Health Department, as both entities hoped that a collaborative relationship would strengthen their ability to slow the spread of the virus. Their relationship was bolstered on Aug. 7 by an agreement that allows for the exchange of patient information between the university and health department. The agreement fortified local contact tracing programs by increasing the resources, specifically the names of Covid-positive individuals, made available to the health department, which spearheads such efforts.

Carla Turner, assistant health director for New Hanover County, said conversations between the health department and UNCW officials have increased in frequency and now occur daily.

We were keeping an eye on the increasing number of 18-to-24 year old positives in New Hanover County, Turner said. As we watched that number continue to rise, and through our case investigation and contact tracing determined that there was some social gathering happening amongst students in the community, we reached out to UNCW.

Turner said during a Labor Day weekend phone call between the two entities, UNCW presented its now-underway plan to have double-occupancy rooms on campus converted into singles, Turner called the plan a really good first step to try to separate some of the contacts that were seeing amongst students.

Although the county and university are swapping case information and patient data, contact tracers still dont have a crystal-clear method of pegging a Covid-positive individual as a UNCW student.

The only way we are going to know that is when we call and talk to them and they tell us that they are, Turner said. What were doing is not punitive. We are just trying to protect this community as a whole.

The information contact tracers receive is only as good as the Covid-positive individual is willing to provide, Turner said.

One of the speed bumps were running into is that folks that were calling arent being completely forthcoming with information, she said.

One month ago, the 18-to-24-year-old demographic accounted for 26% of Covid-19 cases in New Hanover County, Turner said. As of last week, the 18-to-24-year-old population accounts for 34% percent of positive cases in the county.

In that age range of 18-to-24, we are seeing a steady increase of positives, as we see a slow decrease in the 25-to-49-year-old age range, Turner said.

On the morning of Sept. 10, James Winebrake, UNCWs provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs, sent out a mass email to university faculty.

He acknowledged the de-densification protocols implemented earlier in the week having first-year students in double rooms make the difficult decision of figuring out who gets to stay and who has to leave the dorm increases the complexities that faculty are facing in their courses due to student absenteeism related to COVID, Winebrake said in the email.

There is, of course, another option and that is an administrative directive to move ALL classes online However, I believe strongly in the principle that faculty are in the best position to determine how to deliver their course content, and I am not advocating for an administrative directive to move all classes online at this time. he wrote.

From his computer webcam, Chancellor Jose Sartarelli addressed UNCW faculty earlier this week in a Zoom meeting of the faculty senate, the legislative body of university professors.

The past few days have been more stable but we had heard from our folks at the local health authority, and they were getting concerned by the fact that our numbers are going up and the numbers for the county are going down, Sartarelli said. And so we discussed it and we came to the conclusion that perhaps another step in our effort would be to de-densify somewhat, somewhat more than we had been doing before. A lot of the positives that we had been getting were from the dorms next to the student village.

According to internal emails, after a UNCW press release mentioned the health department in relation to the de-densification decision, blame and questions were directed toward county health officials. New Hanover County communications staff told UNCW comms staff that in future press releases, if the health department was going to be cited, the county would like prior notice.

We would definitely like to be informed and allowed to provide edits on communications that mention the health department directly, Chief Communications Officer Jessica Loeper wrote to a UNCW media relations official.

[Editors note: UNCW is currently operating with an interim chief communications officer after CCO Janine Iamunno went on medical leave in early July]

On Aug. 28, Philip Tarte, the countys health director, forwarded a UNCW coronavirus-related press release to the departments preparedness coordinator, Lisa Brown.

I was not aware of the dashboard that is linked in the release, Brown responded, referring to UNCWs public data dashboard that represents confirmed COVID cases among UNCW students, faculty, and staff.

In reviewing the data in the public-facing reported cases, I am concerned about the timeliness of reporting these cases to NHC as that is not matching up with what I see in our cases, Brown wrote.

Two health department staffers from the county were placed at UNCW student health recently, to further integrate and fortify the joint-contact tracing apparatus, Turner said.

Dr. Katrin Wesner-Harts, UNCWs interim associate vice chancellor for student affairs, said she is grateful for the countys assistance as UNCW navigates through its decision-making process.

People have been dealing with this for months now and we all need to sort of stay with it, and not give up because thats going to play an important part, Wesner-Harts said.

Back on the Zoom call, Sartarelli talked about new mitigation efforts currently in the works.

Once this is done, next week were going to be talking to them, all of them, and demanding a little more stuff, the chancellor said. And the stuff that were going to be demanding is the wearing of masks everywhere, and even when youre sitting outside with your friends.

After Sartarelli finished his update, Provost James Winebrake took over, empathizing with professors on how uprooting a significant number of on-campus students could affect the facultys ability to teach.

This is going to be challenging. We cant kid ourselves. Theres going to be possibly a few hundred mostly freshmen who will be leaving campus, he said.

Professor Aaron Wilcox chimed in. I just want to stress again, the difference between a temporary pivot for faculty to provide online instruction materials, and to effectively have to teach an entire second course for the entire remainder of the semester, he said. That is a giant ask, and I understand their need for de-densification, but thats a lot to put on the faculty.

Winebrake responded: There arent a lot of easy answers here, but were doing what we think we have to do, and in consultation with the county health officials, what we need to do.

To inform a potential decision on canceling in-person classes, UNCW is following a seven-point plan of different metrics access to supplies such as personal protective equipment; adequate staffing; input from county partners; adequate access to testing; the number of active positive cases; adequate isolation/quarantine space; and guidance from different state authorities.

In the past two weeks, according to the UNCW dashboard, 280 active cases were reported in the community. Since July, 333 total cases have been reported.

When asked about the pivot plan, and what the specific number of active positive cases is that would warrant a campus closure, a UNCW spokesperson said, A variety of these factors will help inform the decision when to pivot from in-person to online, if needed. As the pivot plan was being developed, we consulted with the New Hanover CountyPublic Health Department.

When asked if New Hanover County public health officials have confidence in UNCWs ability to continue this semester as-planned, without needing to transition to an online-only format, a New Hanover County spokesperson said, Public Health is hopeful that UNCWs decision to move students to single rooms will help slow the spread of the virus by decreasing density and the close-proximity of student living.

The county spokesperson added that UNCW has never been asked by the county to make a transition away from in-person classes.

Public Healths consultation has involved, and continues to include, helping UNCW develop a plan that was flexible, including mitigation options, based on data and trends.Any actions by UNCW are part of their options in their plan, she said.

Provost Winebrake sent an emailed statement when asked about how UNCW officials are quantifying the risk assumed by the university as it continues operations. Each campus is different, and certain strategies may work well on one campus but not on another. Thanks to great work by our faculty and staff, and great effort by the vast majority of our students, UNCW is responding to conditions caused by the pandemic as efficiently and effectively as possible, the statement said.

We certainly understand that this virus spreads rapidly and that the situation on our campus could evolve quickly. We are approaching each day with a flexible mindset, and we are prepared to alter our plans as needed to continue supporting our educational mission in conjunction with the health and safety of our students, faculty, staff and the community.

Haley, the UNCW student who tested positive for Covid-19 in July, said the unexpectedness of her diagnosis makes her wary of UNCWs ability to continue operations on its current path.

As far as what goes on on-campus, I dont know, but its the stuff that goes on off-campus that is obviously concerning, she said. Theres just so many unknowns that we dont know about this virus, that I dont think its safe to have students congregating in classrooms. I just really dont think thats a good idea.

Send tips and comments to preston@localdailymedia.com or (910) 478-6511

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Eternal Blizzard in the Tired Mind: Kaufman delves ever deeper into the human psyche – The Stanford Daily

Charlie Kaufmans films, as a screenwriter (Being John Malkovich, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) or as a director (Synecdoche, New York, Anomalisa), have a reputation for being heady, sometimes alienating works that excavate uncomfortably deep into the mental chasms within their characters (often leaving them buried within). His latest directorial effort, Im Thinking of Ending Things, is not different in that sense, except that the movie starts deep in a tunnel that has already been dug out. Its one thing to make a story about people traveling into the recesses of their minds; in his latest latest twist, Kaufman does away with all outside perspective.

Most one-liners describing the plot of Im Thinking of Ending Things will be highly misleading for what viewers are getting themselves into (the Netflix trailer also plays up horror movie notes, which are much subtler in the film). The film follows the same set-up as Ian Reids 2016 novel of the same name (which Kaufman adapted into a screenplay himself). A couple, Lucy and Jake (Jessie Buckley and Jesse Plemons) are taking their first road trip together for her to meet his parents (short but energetic performances from Toni Collette and David Thewlis) at their farmhouse in the country.

But, as Buckleys character explains, something is amiss: Shes thinking about ending the relationship. Nothing is outwardly the matter. But theres just something ineffable, profoundly, unutterably, unfixably wrong, Lucy explains in an inner monologue that is present through the first 20 minutes. The movie stays with Louisas perspective through a ride to the country, an increasingly surreal visit at the parents house, and a tense ride back through a blizzard. And thats not a typo Buckleys characters name changes throughout the film (the character is actually credited as the Young Woman Ill keep calling her Lucy from now on). Identity, amongst everything else one might try to grasp to orient themselves in the world, is constantly in question.

Though Kaufman, in his own indirect way, lays his cards on the table in the films final moments, there are hints to what is going on along the way. The plot seems to play out in real time, yet, over the 134 minute runtime, hours pass. Time doesnt pass on the same scale, or in the same direction, for different characters at different points. Both Jake and Lucy have moments where their dialogue is unexplainably lifted directly from existing artistic products, including films and film reviews. Events and personal details are recounted multiple times, the specifics changing every few minutes. Its as if the world is being controlled by some deity that isnt sure what it actually wanted to create and imposes different iterations of what could have been to try to sort it all out. Perhaps most puzzling is how Lucy takes all of this in; while she seems confused and scared in some moments, she never has a full reaction to the madness around her, like she doesnt really notice what is happening.

Amidst the shifting fabric of the film, there are various graspable themes that float in and out. Much of it has to do with the nature of memory, both in the ways in which some small details are the only things that one can remember (like the way a childhood dog shook itself dry), or how the uncertainties of passed time cast doubt on specific events. Does recollection of an ill parent change perceptions of something that happened while they were still healthy? Even further, how do memories play out with accumulated knowledge? As might be expected, Kaufman digs into the corners of the mind that hold trauma and the little details that draw out everything from rightful spite to full-on anger. People love to fixate and ruminate on the perceived slights experienced in life. But as strong as these reactions are in the moment, as much as they might stick through the months and years, there are mightier currents that flow through life, ones that rely on compassion and more unexplainable forces. Or, maybe, all of us just get too tired to sustain these emotions in any meaningful way.

Even if viewers can work out what the movie is generally about, there are so many elements and scenes layered in that are left to be puzzled out. Why is Jake so reluctant to go into the house when they actually arrive, and why are his parents so weird? What is the Young Womans dread-infused trip to drop some laundry off in the basement all about? Why is the basement door covered in scratches? What are the unrelated cutaways to a high school janitor all about? After watching the film some of these factors make sense; others remain frustratingly impenetrable (to this writer at least), but in a way that feels to be by design. This is not a film meant to provide answers or closure; the conceit of the project has very little to do with that. Watching it a second time through while understanding the basic where and what of the events does not really answer many of the questions that arise upon a first viewing, but the experience is, from moment to moment, more emotionally resonant.

Kaufmans previous work is suffused with a recognition of the artifice and manipulation that is required in artistic creation. This obsession is manifested in various ways; it is blatantly meta in Adaptation, where Charlie and his (fake) identical twin brother are both characters in the movie and both credited as screenwriters, but it is more subtly, formally expressed in the stop-motion Anomalisa, where the use of blank, identical puppets effectively puts viewers into the headspace of a disengaged protagonist seeking human connection. In Im Thinking of Ending Things, the creation of false realities is simply the way of human life. Kaufmans preoccupation with interiority often delivers crushing existential sentences to the characters he creates. Yet, sometimes, there are glimmers of beauty found within, and the climactic sequence uncovers these, even if briefly. Many people know how it feels to be stuck within themselves, to look out into the world and wish that they could act or talk in a certain way. The reality is that even in these stilted instances in life, the mind may be full of emotion and imagination, a truth that is both reassuring in its humanity and devastatingly confining. Sort of like a Charlie Kaufman movie.

Contact Daniel Shaykevich at [emailprotected].

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SoftBanks Arm sale hits a snag as UK opposition party warns of risk to jobs and digital sovereignty – CNBC

SAM YEH | AFP | Getty Images

The U.K.'s opposition Labour party said this week that an Arm takeover is not in the public interest and criticized the ruling Conservative Party for failing to protect the British chip designer often hailed as one of the nation's most innovative firms from overseas predators.

Arm's chips are used by companies around the globe to power millions of electrical devices. Apple uses them in iPhones and iPads, while Amazon uses them in Kindles, and car manufacturers use them in vehicles. The company has 6,000 staff globally and 3,000 of those are in the U.K.

Ed Miliband, the shadow business secretary, warned that an Arm takeover by a Silicon Valley firm would ultimately lead to U.K. jobs moving overseas.

A government spokesperson said that Downing Street monitors proposed acquisitions closely. "Where we feel a takeover may represent a threat to the UK, the government will not hesitate to investigate the matter further, which could lead to conditions on the deal," they said.

Rumors have been swirling that U.S. chipmaker Nvidia is edging closer to buying Arm from current owner, SoftBank, which has allowed Arm to carry on independently since it acquired the firm in 2016 for 24 billion ($31 billion). SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son confirmed in August that his company is considering selling or listing Arm.

Arm declined to comment and Nvidia did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment.

"Arm is a major British success story, but the government is doing nothing in the face of the risk of the company being swallowed up by Nvidia," Miliband said in a statement shared with CNBC.

"If the government truly believes in an active industrial policy, it cannot be right that they are ignoring the potential consequences of this takeover including the possible implications for where the company is headquartered and the thousands of jobs in Britain that depend on it."

Miliband also warned about the risks of putting too much power in one company's hands.

"We also know the tendency of dominance is a particular problem in the tech sector, and government must be much more vigilant about the risks of this," he said. "The government should show leadership and seek legally binding assurances from Nvidia should it take over the company to keep Arm headquartered in the UK rather than see jobs and decision-making moved across the ocean the same assurances that were made when Arm was taken over by Softbank in 2016."

Miliband's warning comes after several other British tech companies were acquired by larger companies overseas. One of the most notable examples in recent years is London artificial intelligence lab DeepMind, which was acquired by Google in 2016 for around $600 million. Today, DeepMind is widely regarded as one of world leaders in AI research.

The Labour party said there is a "worrying pattern of key British businesses in the vital technology sector being taken over by overseas interests."

Dominic Cummings, the chief advisor to U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, emailed civil servants this week to confirm he is looking at ways to build $1 trillion U.K. tech firms, according to Business Insider.

Referring to DeepMind, Cummings wrote on his blog last March that the U.K. had a "valuable asset and let Google buy it for trivial money without the powers-that-be in Whitehall understanding its significance."

Elsewhere, U.K. network intelligence firm Imagination Technologies was taken over by China-owned investment firm Canyon Bridge in a 550 million deal in 2017. Nvidia itself bought the Bristol-headquartered Icera for $367 million in 2011 and subsequently sacked more than 300 staff in the U.K.in 2015.

Last month, The Evening Standard newspaper reported the deal between Nvidia and Arm was on course to be completed by the end of summer and that sources were valuing Arm at up to 40 billion.

The Labour party said the government should act when acquisitions can result in national assets being "stripped for parts" or shipped overseas. It said the government could do this by expanding the Enterprise Act to include a public interest test where a deal could implicate the U.K.'s industrial strategy.

Last month, Arm co-founder Hermann Hauser said an Arm sale to Nvidia would be a "disaster," pointing out that Arm's business model means it can currently sell to everybody.

"The one saving grace about Softbank was that it wasn't a chip company, and retained Arm's neutrality," he told the BBC. "If it becomes part of Nvidia, most of the licensees are competitors of Nvidia, and will of course then look for an alternative to Arm."

The Labour party said that if Arm is acquired by Nvidia, it would then be subject to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States regulations. That means President Donald Trump could choose which companies Arm can sell to outside the U.S.

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Scientific Psi? Neuralink and the smarter brain – Covalence

Elon Musk by Maurizio Pesce via Wikimedia Commons

What might Elon Musk do to your brain? Hes successfully demonstrated that a deep brain implant can monitor a pigs health like the Fitbit on your wrist. After this success, Musk is coming after you. He plans to install slender electrodes into your brain and connect them to a wireless pod that sits behind your ear. Neuralink chips could measure temperature, pressure and movement, data that could warn you about a heart attack or stroke. This pod or terminal then communicates with your phone. If you want to know what your brain is doing, simply check your phone.

Now, this is puzzling. Mmmmm? Whos checking that phone? Your brain? Or, you? What if you and your brain are the same? Mmmmm? Will checking the phone for brain information provoke the brain to become self-aware? Then what? Will you have two selves: you plus your brain? Oh, this thinking makes my brain tired. Mmmmm? Will my cell phone show that my brain is tired?

What might be the advantages to deep brain implants? First, in the early stages of neuralink development for humans, we can realistically anticipate the medical value of deep brain implants. The potential is truly transformational for restoring brain & motor functions, Musk states. A deep brain implant could function therapeutically to combat dementia, Alzheimers, and even Christian fundamentalism!

The second advantage would be memory enhancement and knowledge expansion. Because the implant is wirelessly connected to an external pod-terminal, information could be sent to the brain and downloaded. A deep brain implant for an ELCA seminarian could electronically place in the students memory every word of the Book of Concord.

A third possibility is the hope of the Transhumanists among us, namely, Intelligence Amplification or IA. Dont confuse IA with AI, Artificial Intelligence. IA enhances your intelligence; it does not create a second or artificial intelligence. With IA, our ELCA seminarians could take all their courses online and graduate in only two years. Oh, wait?

A fourth possibility would be electronic psi. Each of two persons with brain implants could communicate their thoughts wirelessly to the terminal, which in turn would send those thoughts to the other. No need for speech or writing. Thought to thought. Mind to mind. Disagreements and arguments without yelling or screaming.

A fifth possibility adds on to the fourth. Why wait for a thought to be sent to you? Why not think your way to the terminal and then read the mind of the other? The electronic pod terminal could eliminate mental privacy.

Before this neuralink science came along, there was science fiction. I explored these plus additional implications of deep brain implants in my fictional espionage thriller, Cyrus Twelve. My heroine is Leona Foxx, a Lutheran pastor, riveting preacher, astrobiologist, crack shot, Chicago Cubs fan, and part-time CIA operative. This is fiction, remember.

In Cyrus Twelve Leona uncovers a globe-wide syndicate of Transhumanists who use the equivalent of neuralink to enhance spying capability. In this drama, the pod-terminal is a satellite and it connects hundreds of persons with deep brain implants. The satellite is capable of erasing an individuals memory and substituting an entirely fabricated memory. Because the implant is within you, you cannot muster any defense from informational input sent you by the satellite. You cannot shut off fake news, advertising, or orders to kill. Imagine what would happen if ELCA Churchwide would get control of that satellite? Every spy in the world would suddenly learn what justification-by-faith means.

The advancement of deep brain electronic implants prompts the theologian to ponder two matters, one theoretical and one practical. The theoretical matter is this: can the human soul or self be reduced to the brain? My answer is no. The human self or person is utterly dependent on the physical brain, to be sure; but the self or person is more than everything physical or bodily. What we experience as human freedom I define this way: freedom is a form of self-determination. In short, I do not expect discoveries in the neurosciences to reduce the person to the brain.

The practical matter is an ethical matter. How should such awesome technology be used? Should deep brain implants become the stock and trade of international espionage, as is the case in Cyrus Twelve? No, of course not. Our society should rather support ongoing medical research leading to therapies and even enhancements. Like all technological advances, neuralink should be pressed into the service of human flowering.

Ted Peters is a pastor in the ELCA and Emeritus Professor of Systematic Theology and Ethics at Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary in Berkeley, California. He co-edits the journal, Theology and Science for the Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences at the Graduate Theological Union. He is author of God The Worlds Future (Fortress, 3rd ed., 2015) and editor of AI and IA: Utopia or Extinction? (ATF Press, 2019). More of Peters work can be found on his website, TedsTimelyTake.com.

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How to regulate AI, according to the 1967 Outer Space Treaty – Quartz

World leaders attempts to forge global AI regulations have been half-hearted and halting.

In 2018, Canada and France spearheaded an effort to form a regulatory body for AI, backed by the G7but the US spiked the effort, arguing that it would crimp American innovation. Instead, the OECD and the G20 adopted a set of AI principles the following year, while the EU and the World Economic Forum each came up with their own.

They dont really have teeth, and theyre also very fragmented, said Marietje Schaake, the international policy director for Stanfords Cyber Policy Center and former member of the European Parliament representing the Netherlands. To head offAI-enabled human rights abuses (and the chaos of conflicting regulations), global leaders could turn to another set of rules governing a powerful new technology: the 1967 Outer Space Treaty.

In a blog post, DeepMind researcher and Cambridge fellow Verity Harding argued that the Cold War space agreement offers a roadmap for international cooperation achieved at a time at least as unsafe and complicated as todays worldif not considerably more so.

In 1967, as the US and the Soviet Union sprinted to develop their spacefaring capabilities, concern grew that world powers might use space as a staging ground for weapons of mass destruction. The space accords sought to keep nukes out of orbit and to establish that celestial bodies couldnt be colonized or used for military purposes.

The text of the treaty is instructive. Where AI ethics statements are mushythe OECD blandly declares that AI should benefit people and the planetthe space accords are firm. The 1967 treaty states in no uncertain terms, for example, that the establishment of military bases, installations and fortifications, the testing of any type of weapons and the conduct of military maneuvers on celestial bodies shall be forbidden.

The document is also rather short, limited to the areas where global leaders could find broad agreement. Harding argues this was a shrewd approach to getting a deal done in time to have a real impact: Not letting the best be the enemy of the good meant that by the time man landed on the moon we had a global political framework as a foundation on which to build. (Harding did not respond to requests for an interview.)

But it also meant global leaders had to scramble to fill in the gaps later. Zia Khan, who heads the Rockefeller Foundations work on technology and innovation, says these sorts of limitations are inevitable in any treaty. If we just try to come up with rules, they would probably not be correct, or get out of date, or be mostly right but wed have no way to tweak them, he said.

Khan argues that, in addition to a first pass at international law, global leaders must also create a rule-making body that can adjust regulations as the world changes.

And theres one key difference between rocket ships in the 1960s and AI today, Khan points out: Algorithms are already ubiquitous, and businesses are increasingly using them to automate operations. We need people to see this as important, he said. If we dont get our arms around AI now, well end up where we are with the climate because we didnt think hard enough about how we use oil and energy.

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Reporter’s notebook/It’s time to let the games begin – The Daily Times

Start the countdown, folks. Were just 50 days away from the Nov. 3, general elections. Labor Day traditionally marks the official start of campaign season, so expect to see your TVs and radio bombarded with ads, your mailboxes full of mailers, and your streets lined with signs.

According to the West Virginia Secretary of States Office, more than 58,995 registered voters requested absentee ballots as of last Thursday. Keep in mind, 262,503 voters requested absentee ballots for the June 9 primary, and only 224,777 voters actually cast their absentee ballots nearly half of the 450,909 ballots.

So far, county clerks have verified and approved the applications for 46,152 voters as of last week, with absentee ballots being mailed out starting Friday. If you want to vote by mail-in absentee, you have until Wednesday, Oct. 28 to turn in your absentee ballot application.

Either go to your County Clerks Office and fill out a form or download and mail your county clerk a form from the Secretary of States Office. But why do any of that when you can go to GoVoteWV.com and fill out the application online? No need to download a form. No need to drop it in the mail. Just fill out the online application and it gets sent to your county clerk. No muss, no fuss.

Either way, dont wait. Get your application sent in so you can get your absentee ballot ASAP. And dont wait to turn your ballot in either. Much of the headlines youre seeing about issues with the U.S. Postal Service are nonsense. If they can handle the volume holiday packages around Christmas, they can certainly handle the large number of absentee ballots. But why take the chance that something could get screwed up? Mail that ballot in pronto.

Also, if you need to update your voter registration or switch political parties, you have until Tuesday, Oct. 13, to do so. You can check that at GoVoteWV.com. Every election I hear of someone complaining they had to vote a provisional ballot because something wasnt right with their registration. Its almost always someone who moved within the county and didnt update their address with their county clerk. Dont wait to find out your information is wrong or out-of-date.

Speaking of changing political parties, the margin between registered voters in the Democratic and Republican parties is closing.

According to August registration totals compiled by the Secretary of States Office, Democratic Party registration dropped from 38.63 percent of West Virginias 1.2 million registered voters as of the May 19 voter registration deadline for the June primary election to 35.16 percent as of the end of August. Republican Party registration over the same period rose from 34.67 percent in May to 35.16 percent.

The gap separating Democratic and Republican voter registration on May 19 was 4.1 percent. As of August, that gap is now at 2.8 percent. Its a slow and steady gain for Republicans and another drop for Democrats. Keep in mind, the Democratic Party had 46.5 percent of the states voter registration going into the 2016 presidential election. The Republican Party had 30.1 percent.

Voter registration for those choosing no party or other as their voter registration also have benefited from the escape from the Democratic Party or simply from brand new registrations. As of May 19, there were 22.9 percent of voters choosing unaffiliated categories. As of August, that number increased to 26.1 percent.

Well obviously look at that number again after Oct. 13, but the trends dont bode well for Democratic candidates in the state. Republicans already have a prime ballot position thanks to a stay of a lower federal court decision to call the states law laying out ballot position in favor of the party registration of the presidential candidate who received the most votes in the previous election unconstitutional (a law passed by state Democratic lawmakers 25 years ago).

I bet Republicans are cursing the day they passed a bill doing away with straight-ticket voting.

Speaking of the down-ballot effect, Sabotos Crystal Ball at the UVA Center for Politics continues to put West Virginia in the dark red for President Donald Trump, meaning the state is a safe Republican pickup. Former Vice President Joe Biden, the Democratic challenger, could sweep the electoral college and battleground states, but he will very likely not have West Virginias five electoral votes.

As of Aug. 5, Sabatos Crystal Ball also places West Virginia in the deep red for the U.S. Senate, where Republican Shelley Moore Capito is seeking a second term and challenged by Democrat Paula Jean Swearengin, the same person who challenged U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin for the Democratic primary for Senate in 2018. And in their Sept. 3 report, they dont even list any of West Virginias three congressional seats as at risk for flipping.

This might be the first election where Democratic candidates are truly the underdogs. A strong top of the ticket is going to have implications down the ballot. Democratic candidates are really going to have to work hard over the next 50 days to show voters that theyre not like the Democrats they see on TV from D.C.

(Adams is the state government reporter for Ogden Newspapers. He can be contacted at sadams@newsandsentinel.com)

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