rishabh 4w ago • 100%
If the numbers are correct, it would mean about 30 times more influence, not 3
rishabh 3mo ago • 100%
Can it be because of the fact that they do deliveries in the US using cars mainly while in Europe it's mostly with bikes/e-bikes?
rishabh 3mo ago • 100%
A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood. It's a classic tongue twister! Would you like to try another one?
I got this from Gemini.
rishabh 5mo ago • 80%
Percutaneous: means "through the skin"
Transhepatic: means "across the liver"
Portal vein: a major vein that carries blood from the intestines to the liver
Transplantation: surgical procedure involving the removal of an organ or tissue from one person (donor) and placing it in another person (recipient)
Just use LLM these days!
rishabh 10mo ago • 58%
Didn't happen to me on windows! ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
rishabh 10mo ago • 100%
I think they got confused between 'unreal' and 'ethereal'.
rishabh 11mo ago • 100%
These qubits oscillate at microwave frequencies where the quantum information is stored. This means they need to be kept at a temperature where the microwave frequencies are completely devoid of any thermal noise. For microwave frequencies, this temperature is just a few millikelvins above absolute zero. Unfortunately, the temperature is required due to the fundamental nature of thermal noise due to temperature. Making the qubits out of room temperature superconductor would not solve the problem of the need to cool them down - unless they can be operated at higher frequency. There are quantum computers made using light/optical photons which do operate at room temperature because optical photons are at much higher frequency which has no thermal noise even at room temperature.
So, in conclusion, everytime you hear about superconducting qubit, they are always in a giant dilution refrigerator which gets bigger for more qubits as more connections from room temperature to qubits are needed.
rishabh 11mo ago • 100%
For now they are only being used for research purposes. For example, simulating Quantum effects in many atom physics and implementing error correction for future quantum computers. Any real applications still need some time but the pace of development is really quite something.
rishabh 1y ago • 100%
Holy fuck! What are they putting in it? Uranium?!
rishabh 1y ago • 100%
Ein Deutscher kannst das auch verstehen.
rishabh 1y ago • 100%
Error 404: experience not found.
P.S. happened with me too ;)
A broken apart fluffy pancake from Austria served with Marillenröster - something between a Compost and Marmalade made from apricots
rishabh 1y ago • 100%
I am in Austria. I am just getting simple ads - intermittent fasting these days for some reason.
rishabh 1y ago • 100%
Is this related to the German word "gemütlich"?
rishabh 1y ago • 100%
What I really like about Niagra is that the whole app drawer is on your finger tips. One just intuitively starts holding a certain point on screen which will roughly open the alphabet with which the app you are looking for starts.
rishabh 1y ago • 100%
We are still not sure. The paper was published under very suspicious circumstances. However, since the recipe is given in the paper, many groups around the world are running tests. We still need to wait a few more days for more conclusive results. With the results until now, it seems that the material is at least very strongly diamagnetic but I haven't seen any conclusive proof of zero resistivity confirmed by another lab.
rishabh 1y ago • 100%
But the salary has been adjusted for inflation, so the overall point is correct.
rishabh 1y ago • 100%
We have come all the way round bois