entangled dot cloud

MIT engineers develop a magnetic transistor for more energy-efficient electronics

Transistors, the building blocks of modern electronics, are typically made of silicon. Because it’s a semiconductor, this material can control the flow of electricity in a circuit. But silicon has fundamental physical limits that restrict how compact and energy-efficient a transistor can be.MIT researchers have now replaced silicon with a magnetic semiconductor, creating a magnetic transistor that could enable smaller, faster, and more energy-efficient circuits. The material’s magnetism strongly

Nanoscience is latest discipline to embrace large-scale replication efforts

<p>Nature, Published online: 17 February 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00439-6">doi:10.1038/d41586-026-00439-6</a></p>A European project calls for help to verify whether carbon quantum dots are really able to sense chemicals in cells.

Show HN: AILA – Local-first autonomous agent with zero-remote-override

Hi HN, I’m Marco. For the last 4 years, I’ve been a paramedic with the Berlin Fire Dept.I actually failed my first attempt at the State Medical Exam because I became obsessed with solving the &quot;Trust Issue&quot; in Al. I prioritized this code over a &quot;safe life&quot; a paramedical. Now, with 60 days until my final attempt, I am releasing the project that cost me my first degree. The Architecture: GAIA &amp; AILA I built GAIA as my personal counterpart—a digital double of my own conscious

Show HN: OpenEntropy – 47 hardware entropy sources from your computer's physics

I built this to study something most security engineers wave off: whether external factors can nudge hardware entropy sources.Here is why. Princeton’s PEAR lab ran RNG work for about 28 years and shut down in February 2007. People in the lab tried to shift random event generator output, and they reported small deviations after tens of millions of events. https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pear-lab.com&#x2F;The Global Consciousness Project took a similar idea outside the lab. It has run a distributed network

Kevin O’Leary Flags Quantum Computing Risk Amid Bitcoin’s Volatility

Investor and shark tank personality Kevin O’Leary has raised concerns about the long-term security of Bitcoin, and ‘quantum computing’ threat.

This 1 Quantum Computing Rumor Is Making Investors Sell Their Bitcoin. Don't Fall for It

Bitcoin isn't under attack by a quantum computer right now.

Alice & Bob Develops ‘Elevator Codes’ to Slash Error Rates on Cat Qubit Quantum Computers

New pre-print describes codes that “move” logical ancilla qubits up and down to significantly reduce the error rate ...

Neither classical nor quantum: This computer lets light solve complex calculations

For decades, the solution to harder problems has been ‘build a bigger computer’— but ...

Justin Drake: Quantum computing could break cryptographic keys in minutes, three cryptographic components at risk, and the systemic threat to all blockchains | Unchained

Quantum computing could break cryptographic keys in minutes, posing a major threat to crypto security. Current cryptographic systems in crypto are vulnerable to quantum computing advancements. Three ...

D-Wave CEO shrugs off short attacks with 'revolutionary' $550 million quantum computing acquisition

Less than 10% of D-Wave's clients are government research contracts, Alan Baratz says, proof it is offering commercially viable services.

Palm Beach State College to launch quantum computing program

PBSC's Quantum Innovation Center in downtown West Palm Beach will be the county's latest step in making high tech part of its economy.

Silicon quantum processor detects single-qubit errors while preserving entanglement

Quantum computers are alternative computing devices that process information, leveraging quantum mechanical effects, such as ...

A New Complexity Theory for the Quantum Age

Henry Yuen is developing a new mathematical language to describe problems whose inputs and outputs aren’t ordinary numbers.

Show HN: Constrained DSL for Reliable LLM Decisions

Hi HN, Personal notes on a constrained DSL to make LLMs generate reliable decision logic for quant (no arbitrary Python, no hallucinations). Schema-driven prompts, validation loop, deterministic execution.Article + diagrams + public schema: https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;myinvestpilot&#x2F;ai-architecture&#x2F;blob&#x2F;main&#x2F;d...Repo (complete 4-article series, EN&#x2F;ZH): https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;myinvestpilot&#x2F;ai-architectureFeedback welcome!

AI system TongGeometry generates and solves olympiad-level geometry problems

The International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) is a prestigious competition featuring talented high school students from around the world, in which competitors solve complicated mathematical problems. Geometry problems from these kinds of competitions—in particular, the formal logic and spatial reasoning involved—has been noted as a critical benchmark in artificial intelligence (AI) research.

Specially engineered crystal reveals magnetism with quantum potential

Researchers at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, working with international partners, have uncovered surprising behavior in a specially engineered crystal. Composed of tantalum, tungsten and selenium—elements often studied for their potential in advanced electronics—the crystal demonstrates an unexpected atomic arrangement that hints at novel applications in spin-based electronics and quantum materials.

From cells to companies: Study shows how diversity scales within complex systems

A mystery novel, a history book, and a fantasy epic may have little in common in plot or style. But count the words inside them and a strange regularity appears: many new words show up early, then fewer and fewer as the author reuses what has already been introduced. That pattern, known as Heaps' law, turns out not to belong to books alone. A new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences finds that the same rule also describes how many complex systems grow, from livi

Daily briefing: Exercise rewires the brain for endurance, in mice

<p>Nature, Published online: 13 February 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00499-8">doi:10.1038/d41586-026-00499-8</a></p>Exercise might pump up our neurons as well as our muscles. Plus, the source of a rare side effect of some COVID vaccines and the ‘phantom pain’ that can be felt when biodiversity is lost.

New amplifier design promises less noise, more gain for quantum computers

The low-noise, high-gain properties needed for high-performance quantum computing can be realized in a microwave photonic circuit device called a Josephson traveling-wave parametric amplifier (JTWPA), RIKEN researchers have shown experimentally. This advance stands to speed up development of superconducting quantum computer systems at the 100-qubit scale. The work is published in the journal Physical Review Applied.

Proton's width measured to unparalleled precision, narrowing the path to new physics

Physicists in Germany have carried out the most accurate measurement to date of the width of the proton. By examining a previously unexplored energy-level transition in the hydrogen atom, Lothar Maisenbacher and colleagues at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics have shown that the Standard Model continues to hold up under extraordinarily tight scrutiny, leaving even less room than before for rival theories that contradict our best understanding of how the universe behaves. The research ha