All posts tagged: Ordinary

Scientists solve difficult quantum problem using ordinary computers

Scientists solve difficult quantum problem using ordinary computers

Quantum computing’s edge looked closer after a hard physics problem seemed beyond classical machines. But a new result shows compressed math and smarter algorithms can match or beat that benchmark, raising fresh questions about where true quantum advantage really begins. For years, quantum computers have carried a bold promise. They could solve problems so complex that even the world’s best classical computers would fail. That promise fueled a global race among scientists and technology companies to prove “quantum advantage,” the point where quantum machines outperform traditional computing systems. Now, physicists at the Center for Computational Quantum Physics at the Simons Foundation’s Flatiron Institute and collaborators at Boston University have shaken that narrative. Using advanced mathematics, tensor networks and clever coding, the team solved a difficult quantum physics problem that another group had claimed only a quantum computer could handle. The breakthrough shows that classical computers may still have far more power than many researchers expected. In fact, some of the calculations were completed on a personal laptop. “Whenever we see these kinds of claims, we’re …

The astonishing amount of energy locked inside ordinary matter

The astonishing amount of energy locked inside ordinary matter

Matter looks calm and solid, but its atoms hold immense energy locked inside tiny nuclei. That hidden reserve rarely escapes because powerful forces keep matter stable, yet when the lock breaks, it can light stars or level cities. A stone in your palm feels steady and complete. A coin seems dense, cold, and unmistakably solid. A phone looks like a finished object, built from metal, glass, and circuitry that stay neatly in place. Modern physics tells a far stranger story. What looks solid is mostly empty space, and what looks quiet contains an enormous reserve of energy. That contrast gripped physicists for generations, including Richard Feynman. Once the atom came into focus, matter no longer seemed like simple stuff packed tightly together. It began to look more like energy held in stable arrangements, hidden behind forces strong enough to keep the world from flying apart. The fact that everyday objects stay calm is part of the mystery. A table does not erupt when it supports a cup. A mountain does not spill its inner energy …

Ada Ferrer’s History of Utterly Ordinary Cubans

Ada Ferrer’s History of Utterly Ordinary Cubans

Decades ago, Ada Ferrer learned a lesson about what she’d later call the “misencounter between the history I was reading and the history of the people in my life.” During the late 1980s, while pursuing a master’s degree in history at the University of Texas, Ferrer asked her parents to share their memories of events covered in her coursework. Did Adela and Ramón, who had emigrated from Cuba in the early ’60s, remember the nation’s constitutional convention of 1940? They did not. Had they attended Fidel Castro’s massive rallies during the 1959 Cuban Revolution? They had not. Castro’s agrarian reforms hadn’t touched Ramón’s family farm, which was too small to be confiscated; neither parent watched the leader’s hourslong speeches, because they didn’t have a television. Yet Ferrer’s mother and father were profoundly shaped by the history they hadn’t witnessed directly. So was Ferrer, who has devoted her life to studying the country where, as she writes, “I was born but could not remember.” Today, she is a professor of history at Princeton and the winner …

Ordinary People Fear AI, While the Tech Leaders Working to Create a Permanent Underclass Say They’re Extremely Psyched About It

Ordinary People Fear AI, While the Tech Leaders Working to Create a Permanent Underclass Say They’re Extremely Psyched About It

Sign up to see the future, today Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech Despite a massive campaign by some of the wealthiest companies in the world to push AI as the cure-all for society’s problems, regular working-class people remain resentful of the technology at best, and downright petrified at worst. At a contentious county commission meeting in Box Elder, Utah, for example, sheriff’s deputies held irate community members back after three county commissioners rammed through a hyperscale data center backed by Canadian billionaire Kevin O’Leary. A growing number of younger workers, fearing life in a market economy in which their labor is made obsolete, are actively sabotaging AI in the workplace. A not insignificant number of concerned citizens have started ripping AI surveillance cameras out of their mountings. Tech executives and AI experts, meanwhile, are stoked about the new technology. Corporate consultants no longer bite their tongues when they talk about devastating workplace austerity regimes, while tech executives like OpenAI’s Sam Altman brag that AI is upending the basic foundations of …

The Importance of an Ordinary Day

The Importance of an Ordinary Day

When students, or professionals, sit down across from me for what I call a “Flourishing Chat,” which is a mix between life, professional, and health coaching, they rarely begin with a crisis. More often they say something like, “I know what I want to do… I just don’t feel that great about it.” They describe futures that sound impressive: consulting, medicine, law, leadership roles at major companies. The plans are polished. The résumés are strong. From the outside, everything looks ready to go. Then I ask a different question: “What would your ordinary Tuesday look like at this job?” I don’t want to know about the title on their business cards or their starting salary. I want them to tell me what time they’ll wake up, who they will spend their days with, what kinds of problems they will solve, what their evenings feel like when they come home tired. At this point in the conversation, every time, students, and sometimes even professionals, can’t answer my questions. The conversation turns into silence. They have thought …

When God Used an Ordinary Christian Woman to Speak to a Soviet Union President – OpentheWord.org

When God Used an Ordinary Christian Woman to Speak to a Soviet Union President – OpentheWord.org

Former Soviet Union President Mikhail Gorbachev Credit: RIA Novosti archive, image #850809 / Vladimir Vyatkin / CC-BY-SA 3.0 158 | When God Used an Ordinary Christian Woman to Speak to a Soviet Union President FOLLOW OUR PODCAST ON (search opentheword): PODCAST NOTES: One of the biggest problems facing the church today is our obsession with Christian superstars. We have TV evangelists and mega pastors, but I believe that the Holy Spirit wants to use ordinary believers, like you and me, in powerful ways. A few weeks ago, a friend sent me an article about a story published by Crescendo Magazine in 1990 on how God powerfully used a Finish music student Päivyt Rajamäki. In October 1989, then Soviet Union President Mikhail Gorbachev was scheduled to visit Finland. When Päivyt heard the news the Holy Spirit said ‘You absolutely must meet him and say something to him!’ Over the next few days, the urge continued, but she had no idea what she would say to Gorbachev. When Päivyt, who was studying violin at Helsinki’s Sibelius Academy, …

When the Holy Spirit Releases a Gift of Healing Through an Ordinary Believer – OpentheWord.org

When the Holy Spirit Releases a Gift of Healing Through an Ordinary Believer – OpentheWord.org

The Holy Spirit wants to use ordinary believers in powerful ways. In 1 Corinthians 12, Paul writes that the spiritual gifts are intended for the whole body. Every believer who is filled with the Holy Spirit has at least one supernatural gift, which includes ‘gifts of healing’ in verse 9. When Myles Seely, 13, was born, he had inherited condition that has plagued the family, Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease. His right kidney was also critically damaged by reflux and had not grown and his left kidney was enlarged due to a cyst, His family attends Radiant Springs Church in Crete, Nebraska where they have recently been witnessing a spate of healing miracles. Myles’ parents were told their son would need a kidney transplant and was actually put on the list at the age 10. It takes upwards of five years for a kidney transplant in Nebraska. The family was hesitant about the procedure because of the numerous problems that comes with transplants. But by the age of 12, Myles’ Glomerular Filtration Rate had dropped …

An attack on ordinary Jewish life and God in Michigan

An attack on ordinary Jewish life and God in Michigan

(RNS) — If you were wondering what “globalize the intifada” means, it happened at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield Township, Michigan, on Thursday (March 12). An armed man drove an explosives-laden truck into one of the largest Reform temples in the country, carrying weapons and prepared to create lethal mayhem. Security confronted him. Shots were fired. The attacker died at the scene. A security guard was injured, but miraculously, there were no casualties among congregants or children in the synagogue preschool. The suspect, Ayman Ghazali, was a Lebanese immigrant. Though a motive has not been determined yet, officials said four of his family members were killed in an Israeli airstrike in Lebanon in recent days, multiple news outlets reported. The Federal Bureau of Investigation described the synagogue attack as a targeted act of violence against the Jewish community. The suspect could just as easily have been a right-wing antisemite — a devotee of Tucker Carlson, Nick Fuentes or Candace Owens. The hateful rhetoric and violence are interchangeable and indistinguishable. The irrational hatred makes Jews targets …

‘Real fear’ among ordinary Iranians at prospect of Trump deal with regime

‘Real fear’ among ordinary Iranians at prospect of Trump deal with regime

There is “real fear” among many ordinary Iranians that Donald Trump, who said this week the US war on Iran could be over “soon”, may strike some sort of deal with the country’s new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei, a man many see as behind some of the harshest internal repression seen in the country in recent years. That is according to France 24 Observers journalist Ershad Alijani, who has been speaking with people inside Iran as part of a report published this week. Source link