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Open Source/ Free Software list!

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By hellowalkman · Posted
very cool take! -
By hellowalkman · Posted
Quantum computer does something for first time, creates "certified truly random" numbers by Sayan Sen Image by Ron Lach via Pexels A group of researchers from JPMorganChase, Quantinuum, Argonne National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and The University of Texas at Austin has reached a major milestone in quantum computing. In a new paper published in Nature, they describe how they used a 56-qubit quantum computer to generate random numbers and then proved those numbers were truly random using powerful classical supercomputers. This achievement, called "certified randomness," could be useful in areas like cryptography, privacy, and fairness. Certified randomness means the numbers are not just unpredictable, but also freshly created and mathematically verified. Classical computers can’t do this on their own. They usually rely on hardware random-number generators, which can be tampered with. But with this new method, even if someone tried to interfere with the quantum computer, they wouldn’t be able to fake the randomness and still pass the certification. The idea behind the protocol was first proposed by Scott Aaronson, a computer science professor at UT Austin. He worked with his former postdoctoral researcher, Shih-Han Hung, to support the experimental team. “When I first proposed my certified randomness protocol in 2018, I had no idea how long I’d need to wait to see an experimental demonstration of it,” Aaronson said. “Building upon the original protocol and realizing it is a first step toward using quantum computers to generate certified random bits for actual cryptographic applications.” To carry out the experiment, the team accessed Quantinuum’s System Model H2-1 quantum computer over the internet. They used a method called random circuit sampling (RCS), which is known to be extremely hard for classical computers to simulate. The process had two main steps. First, the researchers sent the quantum computer a series of challenge circuits created from a small seed of randomness. The quantum computer had to solve these challenges by picking one of many possible answers at random. Then, in the second step, classical supercomputers checked the results to confirm the randomness was real. The team used several supercomputers with a combined performance of 1.1 × 10¹⁸ floating-point operations per second (1.1 ExaFLOPS) to certify 71,313 bits of entropy. This means they proved that the random bits couldn’t have been generated by classical methods, at least not under realistic conditions and assumptions. “This work marks a major milestone in quantum computing, demonstrating a solution to a real-world challenge using a quantum computer beyond the capabilities of classical supercomputers today,” said Marco Pistoia, Head of Global Technology Applied Research at JPMorganChase. Quantinuum had upgraded its H2 system to 56 qubits in June 2024. Thanks to its high accuracy and ability for any qubit to connect with any other, the system was able to perform RCS far better than previous machines. This upgrade, combined with Aaronson’s protocol, made the breakthrough possible. “Today, we celebrate a pivotal milestone that brings quantum computing firmly into the realm of practical, real-world applications,” said Dr. Rajeeb Hazra, President and CEO of Quantinuum. “These results in quantum computing were enabled by the world-leading U.S. Department of Energy computing facilities at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,” said Travis Humble, director of the Quantum Computing User Program at ORNL. While quantum computers have shown they can outperform classical ones in theory, turning that power into something useful has been a challenge. This experiment shows that quantum computers can now do something practical that classical computers simply can’t match. Source: University of Texas, Nature This article was generated with some help from AI and reviewed by an editor. Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, this material is used for the purpose of news reporting. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. -
By Brian Miller · Posted
I noticed when I click on the update button (from the desktop app), it says I'm still on the latest version, that does not give me access to ChatGPT five, and I do not see GPT-5 even in the web account either, despite being a pro customer. -
By Squuiid · Posted
These were (are) awesome games. Love this. -
By Nas · Posted
That heavily compressed and pixelated image IS NOT THE HIGH RESOLUTION wallpaper! It looks like absolute trash due to the excessive pixelation from the multiple rounds of compression on it. Like, seriously, on my 10-yr-old PC it doesn't take more than a simple image viewer to see that this is not a high-res image to begin with! EDIT: The non-Reddit compressed version is available on a CDN at https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/Vt84y2Lg4Pgpkkqk7VMLLa.jpg
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Guest deadzombie
After my recent dive into Win32 open source software, I was thinking the community might benefit from a list of quality freeware/ open source applications.
Office Suite: OpenOffice (MS Office)
Photo Editor: The Gimp (Adobe Photoshop)
Browser: Mozilla (Internet Explorer)
Web Server: Apache (IIS)
Remove Access: TightVNC (Remote Desktop)
P2P File Sharing: Gnucleus (KaZaa)
FTP Client: SmartFTP (Any Commercial FTP Client)
TelNet/ SSH Client: Putty (Data transfer)
Compressed file extraction: ExtractNow (Winzip, Winace, Winrar)
Download manager: Star Downloader (Gozilla, Download Accelerator)
Network / System montor: Samurize (DU meter, Sysmeter)
bulletin board:Invision Board (vBulletin)
Compressed File Extraction:UltimateZip (WinZip, WinRAR, WinACE)
Download Manager:NetAnts (GoZilla, DAP)
IRC Client:BersIRC (IRC)
P2P Client:WinMX (Napster)
Anti-Virus:AVG Anti-Virus (Norton AV)
Image Viewer:SlowView (ACDSee)
Picture Editor:20/20 (MS Paint)
Office Suite:SOT Office (MS Office)
Icon Editor:Icon Sushi (Icon Workshop, IconXP)
As people post good freeware/ open source applications I will update this list. Please only post applications that have a known commercial equivialant.
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