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If Kris Kobach Wants To Lose Another Seat For The GOP, Who Are We To Argue? – Wonkette

It's just possible that the national GOP hates Kris Kobach more than Kris Kobach hates immigrants. Which is high bar to clear! From the moment he declared for the Kansas's US Senate race by misspelling his own name on the registration form, the National Republican Senate Committee accused him of "simultaneously put[ting] President Trump's presidency and Senate Majority at risk." But Chris -- sorry, Kris -- Kobach brushed off the DC insiders' gripes with the dogged confidence of a guy who plans to grift a billion dollars to erect a home-brew border wall.

While Mike Pompeo was Hamlet-ing all over Foggy Bottom, the NRSC could keep Kansas on the back burner. But now that Pompeo says he's foregoing the Senate race to take advantage of a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to fuck shit up in the Middle East, the GOP is panicking. The Wall Street Journal reports that internal Republican polling has Kobach almost 20 points ahead of his closest primary challenger, Rep. Roger Marshall (KS-1), and weak against a strong Democrat in the general. And Republicans remember that 18 months ago, that racist nutbag Kobach managed to lose the Kansas gubernatorial election by five percent in a state Trump took by 20 points. So they're not risking a narrow GOP majority in the Senate on that incompetent buffoon, at least not if they can help it.

Yesterday the GOP wheeled out 96-year-old Bob Dole to endorse Marshall to succeed retiring Senator Pat Roberts, and Marshall reported raising $250,000 in just three days after Pompeo noped out.

Marshall, who knocked out fellow Republican Tim Huelskamp in 2016, may look like your average whitebread Republican from central casting. And that's because he is. The anti-choice obstetrician opposes both the Affordable Care Act and the state Medicaid expansion agreed upon last week, which would provide health insurance to 100,000 Kansans.

In a normal year, Marshall would likely coast to victory against any Democratic opponent. But this is not a normal year. No year with Kris Kobach on the ballot is normal of course -- the guy recently held a fundraiser with Peter Thiel and Ann Coulter. Besides which, the state seems to be listing toward the center after former governor Sam Brownback's batshit tax cut experiment blew a giant hole in the Kansas GOP's hull.

Last fall, four state legislators switched their party affiliation to Democratic in light of the shitshow shambles that is the GOP in the age of Brownback and Trump. And one of those legislators, state Sen. Barbara Bollier, is likely to be this year's Democratic senatorial nominee. Unlike on the GOP side of the ballot, Democrats have their ducks in order, with the other strong Democrat in the race, former US Attorney Barry Grissom, dropping out and throwing his support to Bollier. She also picked up a high-profile endorsement from former governor Kathleen Sebelius and netted $1 million in donations last quarter, a record for a Democrat in Kansas.

While the GOP has to worry about a contested primary with everyone trying to knock out Kobach -- just like last time -- Bollier can consolidate her support as a centrist who worked (and walked) across the aisle to get things done. It's an outside shot for a Democratic pickup, but with Pompeo out, Cook Political moved the race from Likely to Lean Republican.

Which puts Your Wonkette in the odd position of cheering for Kris Kobach. But we got used to it in 2018, so bring on the cognitive dissonance. Go, Chris, go!

[KC Star / Roll Call / WaPo]

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If Kris Kobach Wants To Lose Another Seat For The GOP, Who Are We To Argue? - Wonkette

Inequality and the Rise of the Forgotten America: An Oral History – FRONTLINE

January 13, 2020

Income inequality in the U.S. today is the highest in recorded history. Despite an unprecedented economic expansion over the past 10 years, millions of Americans have seen little improvement in their daily lives. Frustration and anxiety about being left behind has fueled grassroots anger on both sides of the political divide.

But the discontent began much earlier. When Sarah Palin first emerged on the national stage in 2008, she tapped into a stream of disaffected, mainly white voters. Their anger also played a key role in the birth of the Tea Party, fueled growing disdain for globalization and so-called global elites, and powered Trumps campaign to Make America Great Again.

This oral history focuses on the rage and voting power of what some have called a forgotten America: mainly white, working-class Americans who feel abandoned by their political leaders. These FRONTLINE interviews, drawn from Americas Great Divide and Divided States of America, chronicle Palins meteoric rise, the legacy of the 2008 financial crisis and subsequent Wall Street bailouts, and ultimately the ascendance of President Trump. It includes accounts from current and former Trump confidantes, GOP and Democratic strategists and a cadre of Washington journalists, pollsters and political commentators.

Note: The following interviews have been edited for clarity and length and have been drawn from FRONTLINEs Transparency Project.

Anthony Scaramucci former White House communications directorThe iconic forgotten man, or the forgotten man and woman, is somebody thats been left out of the system. In the case of America over the last 30 years, theres been a vacuum of advocacy for those people. Democrats focused on issues social progress, issues related to racial equality and sexual-preference equality. Republicans were probably focusing more on their corporate donors and some of the well-heeled donors that are high-net-worth individuals. But there was probably a three-decade vacuum of advocacy for the forgotten man and woman.

Robert Reich former U.S. secretary of Labor in the Clinton administrationSarah Palin understood that there were a lot of people out there who felt that the game was rigged against them. They were angry; they felt they were being left behind; that there was a kind of ruling or leadership class, mostly well-educated and coastal, that had contempt for average working people. She tapped into that anger. She tapped into that feeling of bitterness, and it was real, genuine bitterness.

The forgotten Americans are real. The median wage has gone almost nowhere since the late 70s, early 1980s. Most Americans have not seen any gain in their own economic lives, even though the national economy is two to three times bigger than it was People arent stupid. The game is rigged.

Wesley Lowery political correspondent, The Washington PostSarah Palin comes onto the scene and has the ability to just electrify these crowds. Shes someone who almost no one had really heard of before. Its unclear if even McCains closest advisers had heard of her before she was selected. And yet, when she spoke, when she stood at those podiums, you could see in the eyes of the people listening to her, they were identifying with her in a way that they werent when John McCain was speaking.

Steve Bannon former chief strategist in the Trump White HousePeople forget, Palin came with such force out of that thing for the first two weeks before she started to be destroyed, [she and John McCain] were on fire.

Ben Rhodes former Deputy National Security Advisor for the Obama administrationPalin comes onto the ticket, and almost immediately shes giving voice to an enormous sense of grievance about Obamas ascent The selection of Sarah Palin mainstreamed a sense of grievance and racism that was within that party, that was underneath a lid, that was kind of boiling over. And it never got put back in the box. Once that genie was out of the bottle, it was out, and you werent going to put it back in, because Palin emboldened everybody on the right Fox [News], talk radio. Suddenly we can say out loud all the things that we say to each other on email.

Steve Schmidt political strategist for George W. Bush and the John McCain presidential campaignI think she didnt have a deliberate strategy as much as she was an intuitive performer who loved the spotlight, who was able to sense the crowd, and she tapped into the grievance. She was of those people. Her husband had a union card.

When we picked Sarah Palin, one of the things that I thought was virtuous was that this was a person who had put herself through school; that she had gone to five different colleges paying her way through. She was mocked; she was disdained by the news media for that. And I think that when you see people like you being mocked, people translate it as Theyre laughing at me.

Yamiche Alcindor White House correspondent, PBS NewsHourIts interesting who Sarah Palin is appealing to. I cant say if shes appealing to all white Americans or kind of a large swath of white Americans, but maybe who shes appealing to are people who are tired of politicians, people who are tired of eloquently spoken people who are making statements in a way that sounds like they know more than them. Shes talking to a part of America that wants to be out hunting, who wants people running the country who feel like them, who arent interested in politicians who maybe have gone to Ivy League schools.

Wesley Lowery political correspondent, The Washington PostShe was speaking to this kind of forgotten America in a way that they were receptive to, that Sarah Palin sounded like the woman who picks your kids up from soccer practice, like the guy who sits next to you at the bar. And for so many Americans who felt so politically disaffected, that was what they wanted to see. They wanted to be represented by someone like them; that if D.C. was so smart, then why are things so terrible?

Frank Luntz Republican pollsterI dont know the moment when a decision was made that it really was better to be governed by the first 100 people in a telephone book than it was by 100 people who were professionally trained and had the experience of governing. What was interesting about Sarah Palin is that, for some people, the less she knew, the better she was.

If you want to pinpoint the moment when the right completely rejected the left, I think it was over the Sarah Palin nomination. And its because she was so different. And for one brief, shining moment, the right saw her as everything they were looking for: brash, tough, independent; someone who said what they meant and meant what they said, and wouldnt edit it for anyone. And the truth is, so much of Donald Trumps appeal to the right could actually be seen in the appeal of Sarah Palin eight years before.

Charlie Sykes founder and editor-at-large, The BulwarkIve been thinking about this a lot lately, whether or not if you have to trace back how you got to Donald Trump that you have to go back to Sarah Palin; that Sarah Palin was the proto-Trump; that Sarah Palin represented some of the trends in the Republican Party that were going to culminate in Donald Trump. But Im not sure the Republican Party understood this. I dont think they had any idea.

Dan Balz political correspondent, The Washington PostSaving the economy was something [President Barack Obama] was forced to do It was the most important thing he had to deal with, and in some ways the most thankless. I mean, it was something he had to address. They had to stop the bleeding. Unemployment was rising at astronomical rates in that period; jobs were being lost. He had to deal with that.

Steve Bannon former chief strategist in the Trump White HouseEvery financial crisis, I think, in at least modern history is always followed by some sort of populist [reaction.] Remember, this is the biggest financial collapse in the countrys history. This is bigger than the Great Depression

You had so many of the elites making so much money. Then when it collapsed the Federal Reserve didnt call all the financial institutions together and corporations and say: Hey, boys, weve got a problem, right? This is a problem, and we need to pass the hat. Youve got to cough up some cash.

Frank Luntz Republican pollsterThe CEOs of these companies that had failed were all being protected. We were reading about the golden parachutes and the $10 million bonuses while the average individual was losing their jobs, losing the value of their stocks. And then you had people telling them, Oh, get out of the market. Well, if youve already lost 30% and you got out of the market, you never participated when the market came back. There were tens of millions of people who lost their savings. And yet they were told that their taxes were going to go up to bail out the banks and the various different companies that failed.

David Remnick editor, The New YorkerIt is to Obamas enormous credit, I think, that he put a stop to the collapse of the American, and by extension international, economic system. I mean, its an amazing achievement, and done rather quickly. But people left that experience voters left that experience resentful of the fact that there was no punishment. And they saw that even when Obama one time rather subtly expressed disgust for Wall Street, Wall Street suddenly thought of Obama as its enemy, even though he had essentially rescued Wall Street. So the lines were cast.

Molly Ball national political correspondent, Time[The Tea Party] ostensibly came about as a protest of the bailouts, which began under George W. Bush. So it ostensibly was this sort of libertarian, anti-tax, right? Tea and Tea Party was a reference to the Boston Tea Party, but also it stood for Taxed Enough Already. And the idea was that this was primarily a movement of fiscal conservatives who believed that, you know, homeowners shouldnt be bailed out, the famous Rick Santelli rant, I dont want to pay somebody elses mortgage, and the big banks shouldnt be bailed out.

Steve Schmidt political strategistI think the Tea Party movement is misunderstood if you look at it as a reaction solely to the Obama administration. The Tea Party was as much a reaction to the Bush administration as it was to the Obama administration. What Republican voters saw was a Republican president and a Republican Congress spend recklessly, and at the end, what they saw were $800 billion of bailouts for the banks. And there was a rebellion to it.

Charlie Sykes author, How the Right Lost Its MindThe way it looked from ground level was that the big banks, the people who had created the financial crisis, were being bailed out when the little guy was being screwed, and I think that really fed into the narrative that somehow the federal government and the political class was not working for people like you and I; that they were content to take care of Goldman Sachs, they were content to take care of [AIG]. But when it came to the factory in Flint, Michigan, when it came to a factory in Ohio, they just really didnt give a damn.

Robert Reich former U.S. secretary of Labor in the Clinton administrationEverybody knew that the bankers got bailed out and no major executive went to jail, and at the same time, homeowners, many of them underwater, owing more on their homes than they could actually get for their homes, they didnt get help. Millions of people lost their jobs and their savings and, ultimately, their homes. And there was a sense that this was fundamentally unfair.

Frank Luntz Republican pollsterThis created a level of anger like I havent seen since I got involved in politics in the 1980s: Why is everyone taking my money to save themselves when I need saving? And I dont know if [Obama] understood that. But in the polling and the focus groups that I was doing, this is the first time that people started to cry in the groups. This is the first time I ever met people face to face who lost their homes.

I did a number of sessions in Las Vegas; the entire room would come apart in tears because there would be three or four in a group of 25, Id have three people in front of me who were homeless or virtually homeless because it had been taken away, been foreclosed on. How can you bail out a bank that just took someones home, foreclosed on it, and theyre going to have to pay for it? People really, really resented this president for siding with, in this case, the rich and the powerful, and forgetting them. That was the onus where the Tea Party was created.

Steve Bannon former chief strategist in the Trump White HouseWeve essentially put the burden of the bailout on the working class and middle class. Thats why nobody owns anything. But the millennials today are nothing but 19th-century Russian serfs. Theyre better fed; theyre better clothed; theyre in better shape; they have more information than anybody in the world at any point in time, but they dont own anything. Theyre not going to own anything, OK? And theyre 20% if you mark in time against their parents, theyre 20% behind in their income, and theres no pension plan in the future. Theyre all gig economy. Weve literally destroyed the middle class in this country.

Susan Glasser columnist and staff writer, The New YorkerA key shaping experience for especially the younger generation of people who seemed most enthusiastic about [Bernie] Sanders was this incredible cataclysm of the 2008 financial crisis which had shaped their early adulthood and, in profound ways, that was reshaping American society, and that I think Americans in both parties felt that perhaps the establishment as represented by Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama was out of touch with, that they didnt really speak to it in their campaigns in a way that the electorate was hungering for.

Robert Reich former U.S. secretary of Labor in the Clinton administrationThat financial crisis was anot just a wakeup call; it was as if a curtain was opened and everybody could see the true landscape of America, which was a fairly frightening landscape. Most people were not getting anywhere. A small group at the top was basically raking in more and more power and wealth.

Molly Ball national political correspondent, TimeI think what we came to find out, what Obama came to find out, what Sarah Palin successfully recognized, was that there was a part of it that was that, but there was also a big part of it that was just resentment and reaction, right? It was reacting to cultural change and demographic change and political change and social change.

Anthony Scaramucci former White House communications directorWhether you like President Trump or dislike him, you have to acknowledge that he saw the angst of that forgotten man and woman My first campaign rally with him, I remember climbing back onto the campaign plane, looking over to him and said, Wow, youre talking to the people I grew up with. And those were the people, frankly, that I left behind, and I didnt really understand their angst the way I should have. And so I give him a lot of credit for that.

He saw what that forgotten man and woman was going through in the United States right now, during the age of globalism. And theres a rejection of elitists and a rejection of intellectuals and certainly a disdain for the media, because those people feel that theyre being looked down upon.

David Axelrod senior adviser in the Obama administrationWe heard it in focus groups, some of the sentiments that would bubble to the surface among white working-class voters. And their basic feeling was that, you know, poor people which, unspoken, but they meant minorities get handouts, and Wall Street gets bailouts, and theyre stuck in the middle struggling with a collapsing economy, and nobody was riding to their rescue. And it just exacerbated this feeling that they were, you know, that they were losing out, that somehow, you know, the game was rigged against them, the sentiments that Trump so skillfully exploited.

Frank Luntz Republican pollsterWhat comes after tears is resentment, and that resentment breeds hatred. And the same people who thought that they were punished for their bosses, and they were punished for the politicians, and they were personally punished for what went wrong are the same people who voted for Donald Trump a few years later as a way to get even.

Charlie Sykes founder and editor-at-large, The BulwarkI dont attribute great strategic thinking to Donald Trump. I think Ive described him as having reptilian cunning. But I think he had a gut sense of that kind of alienation, and some of the people around him or that he brought around him certainly did.

Cliff Sims former communications aide in the Trump White HouseIf you are a working-class American, youre seeing this happen, especially with lower-skilled labor, where you view it as chopping the bottom rungs off of the economic ladder, that youre trying to climb your way up, and you think you ought to be making 15 bucks an hour, but because the immigrants are coming in and taking these low-skilled jobs, suddenly that job is a $9-an-hour job, or whatever it may be

All they think is, that person just took my job. That person just took my friends job. Or I should be making 15 bucks an hour, but instead Im making nine bucks an hour. Donald Trump could see that, and its kind of shown in the crowds that are out there, that a lot more people are directly impacted negatively, working-class folks.

Victor Davis Hanson senior fellow, Hoover InstitutionAnd the idea that it used to be noble to refine granite for counters or aluminum for refrigerators or wood floors or oil or natural gas, that didnt change. This elite on the coast still used it; in fact, they were more materialistic than ever. But they just forgot to give tribute or recognition or even thought to the people who produce these goods and services, which their new incomes so readily gobbled up.

Ann Coulter conservative commentatorAs we see with the Trump, its the industrial Midwest; it is the manufacturing base of America that has been left behind, forgotten, crushed. Their salaries are going down. You know, construction workers in California, they made more, not even counting inflation, they made more 15 years ago than they do today. Thats even skipping inflation. I mean, by like half. And does anybody speak for them? Does anyone care? Oh, yeah, every politician says, Im going to Ill do something great for the economy, and then, oh, more spending for government workers.

Anthony Scaramucci former White House communications director[Trump] was the avatar to express their anger. He was descending into those rural areas, suburban areas, blighted factory towns, and he was representing for them the wrecking ball. He was saying: Hey, this has been a disaster for you, and jobs have been lost as a result of globalism. Jobs have been lost as a result of uneven or unfair trade. And Im the avatar of your anger. If you elect me, Ill literally be an orange wrecking ball at the barricade known as the swamp, and Ill knock that barricade down for you, and Ill disrupt and change the system. Its a very, very powerful message for 62.8 million people.

When I was on the campaign trail with him, and I saw him talking to people I grew up with, I was like: OK, this is great. His policies are going to help these people. Were going to be able to rebuild the middle class in America. While these two tribes have been fighting and beating their brains out on cable television, these people have been left alone in their own economic desperation, their forgotten status, if you will. But were now going to champion these people, and thats going to be very good for America.

Victor Davis Hanson senior fellow, Hoover InstitutionPeople started to say, Im taking a second look at globalization; I understand what globalization is. Its two Americas. The people who are involved in insurance, finance, media, entertainment, they have a cachet because their labor cant be Xeroxed There was a sense that the government said all of those people who have physical, muscular labor will be replaced, and theyre going to be replaced by cheaper labor in South America, in Asia, in China.

Robert Reich former U.S. secretary of Labor in the Clinton administrationI remember being struck again and again by the fact that when I asked people who they were thinking about for president and this was before Donald Trump even announced they would say to me, Well, somebody like either Bernie Sanders or Donald Trump.

And I remember, I would say back: What? These people, how can you even put them in the same sentence? They are different species. But what I got back from people, and this was Wisconsin and Michigan and Ohio and Kentucky and North Carolina, I kept on getting back from people, Well, theyll shake things up; they are on our side.

Victor Davis Hanson senior fellow, Hoover InstitutionHow did Donald Trump pull that off? Because he is a wealthy, globalized billionaire He said: I know them better than you do. I know these bankers; Ive dealt with them. I know these real estate guys. I know these big corporate people, and theyre a tough bunch. And I was just like them. And they dont care about you. And I didnt care about you for a time he even said that and theyre not nationalists; theyre globalists.

And all of a sudden people said, You know, we have one of our guys that knows those guys, and were going to take our billionaire, and hes going to fight because he cares about us.

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Inequality and the Rise of the Forgotten America: An Oral History - FRONTLINE

Qubits and Defining the Quantum Computer | HowStuffWorks

The Turing machine, developed by Alan Turing in the 1930s, is a theoretical device that consists of tape of unlimited length that is divided into little squares. Each square can either hold a symbol (1 or 0) or be left blank. A read-write device reads these symbols and blanks, which gives the machine its instructions to perform a certain program. Does this sound familiar? Well, in a quantum Turing machine, the difference is that the tape exists in a quantum state, as does the read-write head. This means that the symbols on the tape can be either 0 or 1 or a superposition of 0 and 1; in other words the symbols are both 0 and 1 (and all points in between) at the same time. While a normal Turing machine can only perform one calculation at a time, a quantum Turing machine can perform many calculations at once.

Today's computers, like a Turing machine, work by manipulating bits that exist in one of two states: a 0 or a 1. Quantum computers aren't limited to two states; they encode information as quantum bits, or qubits, which can exist in superposition. Qubits represent atoms, ions, photons or electrons and their respective control devices that are working together to act as computer memory and a processor. Because a quantum computer can contain these multiple states simultaneously, it has the potential to be millions of times more powerful than today's most powerful supercomputers.

This superposition of qubits is what gives quantum computers their inherent parallelism. According to physicist David Deutsch, this parallelism allows a quantum computer to work on a million computations at once, while your desktop PC works on one. A 30-qubit quantum computer would equal the processing power of a conventional computer that could run at 10 teraflops (trillions of floating-point operations per second). Today's typical desktop computers run at speeds measured in gigaflops (billions of floating-point operations per second).

Quantum computers also utilize another aspect of quantum mechanics known as entanglement. One problem with the idea of quantum computers is that if you try to look at the subatomic particles, you could bump them, and thereby change their value. If you look at a qubit in superposition to determine its value, the qubit will assume the value of either 0 or 1, but not both (effectively turning your spiffy quantum computer into a mundane digital computer). To make a practical quantum computer, scientists have to devise ways of making measurements indirectly to preserve the system's integrity. Entanglement provides a potential answer. In quantum physics, if you apply an outside force to two atoms, it can cause them to become entangled, and the second atom can take on the properties of the first atom. So if left alone, an atom will spin in all directions. The instant it is disturbed it chooses one spin, or one value; and at the same time, the second entangled atom will choose an opposite spin, or value. This allows scientists to know the value of the qubits without actually looking at them.

Next, we'll look at some recent advancements in the field of quantum computing.

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Qubits and Defining the Quantum Computer | HowStuffWorks

Googles Quantum Supremacy will mark the End of the Bitcoin in 2020 – The Coin Republic

Ritika Sharma Monday, 13 January 2020, 03:49 EST Modified date: Monday, 13 January 2020, 05:00 EST

Quantum computing whenever hit the headlines left not just Bitcoin holders but also every Cryptocurrency holder worried about the uncertainty around their holdings.

It widely believed that the underlying technology of Bitcoin, Blockchain is immutable, meaning it cannot be changed or encrypted without authority over encryption keys.

However, with quantum computers, it is possible to break a blockchains cryptographic codes. Quantum computing can hit the most significant features of Blockchain like unchangeable data, unalterable, and security making it vulnerable.

Google has achieved quantum supremacy as of late 2019, which poses a threat to Bitcoin. It will be a threat to Blockchain, as quantum computing will affect one blockchains key features like inalterability and security, thus making Blockchain as highly vulnerable technology.

Later, china Joined Google in the quantum supremacy Race and announced working on quantum technology. With this, the year 2020 might witness the end of the Crypto Era.

How can Quantum computing break the Blockchain?

The reason behind this fear is quite genuine and straightforward: Bitcoin or any Cryptocurrency depends on cryptography, hash functions, and asymmetric cryptographic number mainly relies on the computing power of computers. The hash function calculates a random number for each block.

The results obtained by this process are effortless to verify, but challenging to find. However, quantum computing has powerful algorithmic capabilities, which is precisely the enemy of this key.

Quantum computing uses subatomic particles, which will be available in more than one state at one time. This feature makes Quantum computing faster than the technology we use today.

Quantum computers can work 100 million times faster than current systems; the computational power is capable of solving any complex mathematical equation in a matter of a few seconds, which current systems take 10,000 years to solve.

With such super computational powers, Quantum computers is capable of calculating the one-way functions that will make one-way encryption obsolete.

The risk over Blockchain is more if it gets in the wrong hands. Hackers with a quantum computer can hack the Cryptocurrency ledger and take complete control of Blockchain.

Will Googles Quantum computing wipe out your Bitcoins?

Googles quantum Supremacy only to traditional computers on classical problems; this isnt actual quantum technology. It was presented bluntly as, quantum supremacy, though it is just a step in the world of quantum computing space.

Even if Googles quantum computer demonstrates, its computing power on specific problems far exceeds the best performing supercomputing. The results of this research by Google do not have much meaning in terms of Bitcoin. This isnt even near to what we can call breaking Bitcoin or Blockchain.

However, Googles quantum supremacy does not pose any threat to Bitcoin; many people in the space still stressed about quantum threat theory. Many analysts claim that the quantum algorithm used by Shor can crack private keys, but again, there Is a long way to go before it could break bitcoins Blockchain.

According to researchers, a quantum computer with 4,000 qubits is undoubtedly able to break the Blockchain. Still, googles the quantum computer has only 53 qubits, which cannot cause any harm to Blockchain, and it is worth mentioning that The higher the qubit, the more difficult it becomes.

Satoshi Nakamotos Proposed solution to beat Quantum Supremacy

Satoshi was a true visionary, the things we are concerned about today, and had already been answered by him. In 2010, satoshi Nakamoto responded to the question about quantum computers by username llama on bitcoin talk.

He replied that If Bitcoin suddenly cracked, the signature will be destroyed; but if it is slowly changed, the system still has time to convert to a stronger function, and Re-sign all your assets. Another cruder answer to this question suggested by the author of Mastering Bitcoin, Andreas Antonopoulos, If the quantum computer comes, we will upgrade.

The Quantum supremacy threat isnt new to the crypto world, and many cryptocurrency projects such as Ethereum, quantum chains, etc., focused on making blockchain quantum resistance, experts in Cryptocurrency space also advocating the development of quantum encryption technology to ensure the security of funds.

Unless a threat of Actual Quantum computing of far more powerful processor explodes, Bitcoin and its developers still have time to secure it. With the continuous development in Quantum technology and the development of more qubit chips, still, there will be the sword of Damocles hanging on the head of the cryptocurrency.

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Googles Quantum Supremacy will mark the End of the Bitcoin in 2020 - The Coin Republic

Bleeding edge information technology developments – IT World Canada

What are some bleeding-edge information technology developments that a forward-thinking CIO should keep an eye on?

Here are a few emerging technologies that have caught my attention. These are likely to have an increasing impact on the world of business in the future. Consider which ones you should follow a little more closely.

A recent advance in quantum computing that a Google team achieved indicates that quantum computing technology is making progress out of the lab and closing in on practical business applications. Quantum computing is not likely to change routine business transaction processing or data analytics applications. However, quantum computing is likely to dramatically change computationally intense applications required for:

Since most businesses can benefit from at least a few of these applications, quantum computing is worth evaluating. For a more detailed discussion of specific applications in various topic areas, please read: Applying Paradigm-Shifting Quantum Computers to Real-World Issues.

Machine learning is the science of computers acting without software developers writing detailed code to handle every case in the data that the software will encounter. Machine learning software develops its own algorithms that discover knowledge from specific data and the softwares prior experience. Machine learning is based on statistical concepts and computational principles.

The leading cloud computing infrastructure providers machine learning routines that are quite easy to integrate into machine learning applications. These routines greatly reduce expertise barriers that have slowed machine learning adoption at many businesses.

Selected business applications of machine learning include:

For summary descriptions of specific applications, please read: 10 Companies Using Machine Learning in Cool Ways.

Distributed ledger technology is often called blockchain. It enables new business and trust models. A distributed ledger enables all parties in a business community to see agreed information about all transactions, not just their own. That visibility builds trust within the community.

Bitcoin, a cryptocurrency, is the mostly widely known example application of blockchain.

Distributed ledger technology has great potential to revolutionize the way governments, institutions, and corporations interact with each other and with their clients or customers.Selected business applications of distributed ledger technology include:

For descriptions of industry-specific distributed ledger applications, please read: 17 Blockchain Applications That Are Transforming Society.

The Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) is a major advance on Supervisor Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA). SCADA, in many forms, has been used for decades to safely operate major industrial facilities including oil refineries, petrochemical plants, electrical power generation stations, and assembly lines of all kinds.

IIOT is a major advance over relatively expensive SCADA. IIoT relies on dramatically cheaper components including sensors, network bandwidth, storage and computing resources. As a result, IIoT is feasible in many smaller facilities and offers a huge increase in data points for larger facilities. Business examples where IIoT delivers considerable value include production plants, trucks, cars, jet engines, elevators, and weather buoys.

The aggressive implementation of IIoT can:

For summary descriptions of specific IIOT applications, please read: The Top 20 Industrial IoT Applications.

RISC-V is an open-source hardware instruction set architecture (ISA) for CPU microprocessors that is growing in importance. Its based on established reduced instruction set computer (RISC) principles. The open-source aspect of the RISC-V ISA is a significant change compared to the proprietary ISA designs of the dominant computer chip manufacturers Intel and Arm.

RISC-V offers a way around paying ISA royalties for CPU microprocessors to either of the monopolists. The royalties may not be significant for chips used in expensive servers or smartphones, but they are significant for the cheap chips required in large numbers to implement the IIOT applications listed above.

For an expanded discussion of RISC-V, please read: A new blueprint for microprocessors challenges the industrys giants.

What bleeding edge information technology developments would you add to this list? Let us know in the comments below.

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Bleeding edge information technology developments - IT World Canada