Wednesday, May 30, 2007





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What is a Quantum Computer?

What is a Quantum Computer?

Behold your computer. Your computer represents the culmination of years of technological advancements beginning with the early ideas of Charles Babbage (1791-1871) and eventual creation of the first computer by German engineer Konrad Zuse in 1941. Surprisingly however, the high speed modern computer sitting in front of you is fundamentally no different from its gargantuan 30 ton ancestors, which were equipped with some 18000 vacuum tubes and 500 miles of wiring! Although computers have become more compact and considerably faster in performing their task, the task remains the same: to manipulate and interpret an encoding of binary bits into a useful computational result. A bit is a fundamental unit of information, classically represented as a 0 or 1 in your digital computer. Each classical bit is physically realized through a macroscopic physical system, such as the magnetization on a hard disk or the charge on a capacitor. A document, for example, comprised of n-characters stored on the hard drive of a typical computer is accordingly described by a string of 8n zeros and ones. Herein lies a key difference between your classical computer and a quantum computer. Where a classical computer obeys the well understood laws of classical physics, a quantum computer is a device that harnesses physical phenomenon unique to quantum mechanics (especially quantum interference) to realize a fundamentally new mode of information processing.
In a quantum computer, the fundamental unit of information (called a quantum bit or qubit), is not binary but rather more quaternary in nature. This qubit property arises as a direct consequence of its adherence to the laws of quantum mechanics which differ radically from the laws of classical physics. A qubit can exist not only in a state corresponding to the logical state 0 or 1 as in a classical bit, but also in states corresponding to a blend or superposition of these classical states. In other words, a qubit can exist as a zero, a one, or simultaneously as both 0 and 1, with a numerical coefficient representing the probability for each state. This may seem counterintuitive because everyday phenomenon are governed by classical physics, not quantum mechanics -- which takes over at the atomic level. This rather difficult concept is perhaps best explained through an experiment. Consider figure a below:

(Figure taken from a paper by Deutsch and Ekert)
Here a light source emits a photon along a path towards a half-silvered mirror. This mirror splits the light, reflecting half vertically toward detector A and transmiting half toward detector B. A photon, however, is a single quantized packet of light and cannot be split, so it is detected with equal probability at either A or B. Intuition would say that the photon randomly leaves the mirror in either the vertical or horizontal direction. However, quantum mechanics predicts that the photon actually travels both paths simultaneously! This is more clearly demonstrated in figure b.

In an experiment like that in figure a, where a photon is fired at a half-silvered mirror, it can be shown that the photon does not actually split by verifying that if one detector registers a signal, then no other detector does. With this piece of information, one might think that any given photon travels either vertically or horizontally, randomly choosing between the two paths. However, quantum mechanics predicts that the photon actually travels both paths simultaneously, collapsing down to one path only upon measurement. This effect, known as single-particle interference, can be better illustrated in a slightly more elaborate experiment, outlined in figure b below:


(Figure taken from a paper by Deutsch and Ekert)
In this experiment, the photon first encounters a half-silvered mirror, then a fully silvered mirror, and finally another half-silvered mirror before reaching a detector, where each half-silvered mirror introduces the probability of the photon traveling down one path or the other. Once a photon strikes the mirror along either of the two paths after the first beam splitter, the arrangement is identical to that in figure a, and so one might hypothesize that the photon will reach either detector A or detector B with equal probability. However, experiment shows that in reality this arrangement causes detector A to register 100% of the time, and never at detector B! How can this be?

Figure b depicts an interesting experiment that demonstrates the phenomenon of single-particle interference. In this case, experiment shows that the photon always reaches detector A, never detector B! If a single photon travels vertically and strikes the mirror, then, by comparison to the experiment in figure a, there should be an equal probability that the photon will strike either detector A or detector B. The same goes for a photon traveling down the horizontal path. However, the actual result is drastically different. The only conceivable conclusion is therefore that the photon somehow traveled both paths simultaneously, creating an interference at the point of intersection that destroyed the possibility of the signal reaching B. This is known as quantum interference and results from the superposition of the possible photon states, or potential paths. So although only a single photon is emitted, it appears as though an identical photon exists and travels the 'path not taken,' only detectable by the interference it causes with the original photon when their paths come together again. If, for example, either of the paths are blocked with an absorbing screen, then detector B begins registering hits again just as in the first experiment! This unique characteristic, among others, makes the current research in quantum computing not merely a continuation of today's idea of a computer, but rather an entirely new branch of thought. And it is because quantum computers harness these special characteristics that gives them the potential to be incredibly powerful computational devices.





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ATI Avivo™ and ATI Avivo HD

ATI Avivo™ and ATI Avivo HD

High Definition Video and Display Perfection

Enjoy flawlessly smooth video playback on your PC, enhanced with vibrant colors, sharp images, and universal TV and display connectivity delivered by AMD’s acclaimed ATI Avivo™ technology. Now you can step up to AMD’s latest High Definition technology built into our next-generation ATI Radeon™ HD graphics processors, ATI Avivo™ HD.

High Definition Video and Display Perfection

ATI Avivo™ HD is AMD’s new reference for advanced HD image processing, delivering cool and quiet full-spec HD disc playback with hardware-based Unified Video Decoding (UVD) capability*, built-in HDMI with multi-channel HD surround audio, and support for high-quality connectivity with multiple HDTVs and displays.

Watch stunning high definition entertainment from your PC, whether Blu-ray™/HD DVD discs or other HD sources. Be thrilled by immersive high definition big-screen PC gaming, and view ultra high quality photo images and Internet videos. Get universal connectivity support for HDTVs and high-res PC displays, with HDCP1 support for reliably playing the latest HD entertainment on your Windows Vista™ media PC. Step up to ATI Avivo™ HD, and discover your ultimate PC entertainment experience.





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Italians overclock Pentium 4 to 8.18 GHz

WHILE FERRARI WAS soundly beaten by British machinery last weekend in Monaco, the Italians did their best to keep their pride up'n'running. This time, ThuG and his fellow members from OC Team Italy pushed their platinum sample Pentium 4 631 - to massive 8.18 GHz, making all those old-time gamedevs sweat with dreams what could have been. If the record is true, hats down lads.

OverclockersClub tested BenQ FP222WH, a 22" LCD widescreen monitor that sells for mediocre 269.99 US. Honestly, if you are thinking about a new monitor, this one just sounds like a dream. I remember when I bought my 22" iiyama Vision Master Pro. Dealer gave me a hefty discount, so I ended up paying only 2300 US dollars. Today, you get the same screen (albeit in a little lower resolution) for almost 10 times less, and I bought that iiyama in 2000.

Bit-Tech tested Corsair DDR3-1333 modules, that come in Dominator format (of course, with their tri-fan DHX cooling). Since benchmark results are less than stellar, guys gave conservative conclusion. Time for DDR3 will come, though.

And for those that do not want to spend massive amounts of money on new memory standard and appropriate motherboard but still want the best - Legit Reviews tested OCZ's PC2-9200 Reaper Edition memory.

HardwareSecrets tested MSI's GeForce 8500GT, board that is targeting entry-level market.

Overclockers from Down Under tested another silent graphics card, but this time around, we are talking about Gigabyte's vision of 8600GTS graphics card.

Virtual-Hideout tested Antec P182 aluminium case, probable choice for selected few that will be able to afford. However, this case packs some serious punch for those that intend to put multiple graphics cards or hot CPUs.

In meanwhile, Ocworkbench managed to get a hold of AMD's RD790 motherboard and ran four boards in Crossfire. This board will be all over Computex in more flavours than one, so brace for impact. All that we know is that AMD roadmaps claim this chipset comes with PCI Express 2.0, industry's first.

Phoronix decided to do a deep dive and compared ATi Drivers under Ubuntu and Windows operating systems. With Ubuntu coming even as a live CD, you should try to use Linux - Phoronix gives the lowdown for owners of ATI hardware.

CoolTechZone came up with a review of iRiver S10. Yes, there is somebody else making MP3 players other than Fruity Company. And this one makes iPod shuffle look like a giant.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007





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Single-Wafer Cluster System

Single-Wafer Cluster System


Clusterline 300 is a single-wafer cluster system designed for high-volume manufacturing. It can handle wafer sizes up to 300 mm, including 200 and 300 mm bridge tool capabilities. Up to six process modules equipped with high-quality components enable high-process flexibility and optimized productivity. Oerlikon Balzers Coating, Balzers, Liechtenstein,