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Cambridge named as world-leading centre of quantum computing research – Varsity Online

The Centre for Quantum Information and Foundations is based at the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical PhysicsLouis Ashworth

The University of Cambridge has been chosen as one of the worlds top ten universities and research institutions by The Quantum Daily, a leading online publication in the field of quantum computing.

It describes Cambridge as being at the apex of the countrys pioneering quantum movement.

Several quantum computing startups have spun out of the University, while many other quantum organizations made their homes near Cambridge because of the ready access to world-leading talent and brainpower, the publication continues.

Professor Adrian Kent, a quantum physicist at the Universitys Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, told Varsity: Recognition is always pleasing, of course, but were really focussed on enjoying work in this amazing field and doing the best science we can.

The Quantum Daily describes the Centre for Quantum Information and Foundations (CQIF), based at the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, as an example of the Universitys ability to combine research, teaching and service to encourage the growth of this ecosystem.

Conventional (classical) computers use the bit (binary digit) as a unit of information, which can exist in one of two states represented by the digits 0 and 1. Quantum computers, on the other hand, operate on quantum bits, or qubits.

Qubits are governed by the laws of quantum mechanics, so can exist in both states at once. This phenomenon, known as entanglement, may in future allow quantum computers to perform calculations inaccessible to their classical counterparts.

Research at the CQIF currently focuses on theoretical and practical quantum cryptography and relativistic quantum cryptography a field invented at the CQIF, Kent and his colleagues told Varsity.

Quantum cryptography research is driven by the fact that the state of quantum systems is sensitive to measurement and observation, in principle making them ideal for secure communications.

The CQIF is a member of the UK Quantum Communications Hub, which Kent and the other researchers describe as a collaboration between many UK research groups, one of whose projects is building a secure quantum cryptographic network that will link nodes in Cambridge to Ipswich, London, Bristol and beyond.

Other research at the Centre investigates foundational questions probing the basic principles of quantum theory itself and its relationship to classical physics and gravity, as well as the overlap between quantum computing and classical computer science.

CQIF is also examining quantum advantage, or why quantum computers are faster than classical computers, the researchers explained. A better understanding of key differences between behaviours of classical and quantum systems will help answer questions about how to build efficient quantum computers and design software to run on them.

Quantum information theory, the study of information transmission and manipulation in quantum systems, is another focus of research at the CQIF. In particular, Kent and his colleagues are interested in removing the traditionally considered assumptions to understand information transmission in more realistic conditions.

One such assumption is that quantum systems are memoryless, meaning the probability of an event occurring does not depend on how much time has elapsed since the last event, they explained.

The researchers toldVarsity of their enjoyment of the depth and breadth of research in the CQIF, and the diverse backgrounds and expertise of those working at the centre.

It often leads to useful discussions between the different members of CQIF, resulting in cross-fertilization of ideas from different areas, useful insights and, ultimately, exciting results, they continued.

This recognition will hopefully contribute to more talented young scientists aspiring to work in this inspiring place.

In addition to Cambridge, TheQuantum Dailys list includes other organisations from around the world. The Chinese Academy of Science, the Max Planck Society and Harvard University were among those chosen.

Varsity is the independent newspaper for the University of Cambridge, established in its current form in 1947. In order to maintain our editorial independence, our print newspaper and news website receives no funding from the University of Cambridge or its constituent Colleges.

We are therefore almost entirely reliant on advertising for funding, and during this unprecedented global crisis, we expect to have a tough few months and years ahead.

In spite of this situation, we are going to look at inventive ways to look at serving our readership with digital content and of course in print too.

Therefore we are asking our readers, if they wish, to make a donation from as little as 1, to help with our running costs at least until this global crisis ends and things begin to return to normal.

Many thanks, all of us here at Varsity would like to wish you, your friends, families and all of your loved ones a safe and healthy few months ahead.

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This company is using quantum-inspired algorithms to help create the OLED displays of the future – ZDNet

OTI is using quantum simulations, machine learning and real-world testing in pilot production.

It was about four years ago, in the back of an Uber driving him back from a conference, that the idea of using quantum computing to design OLED displays for smartphones and TVs started germinating in the mind of Michael Helander, the CEO and co-founder of materials design company OTI Lumionics.

Helander was sharing his ride with a particle physicist who doubled as a VC, and who was then an early investor in leading quantum computing company D-Wave. As you do in such circumstances, the pair were discussing quantum computing solutions capable of simulating the properties of atoms coming together to form molecules and solids and what that might mean for Helander's field of expertise, computational chemistry.

"That conversation got me asking myself: is this even feasible?" Helander tells ZDNet. Now a few years later, it would seem so. OTI has successfully developed a new electrode material that is ready for mass production and started shipping worldwide at the end of 2020. The material will be used to manufacture first-of-their-kind transparent OLED displays.

Most OLED displays require several layers made up of different materials to function, including a cathode, through which electrical current flows in. Because standard cathodes are not transparent, front-facing cameras and sensors for technologies like facial recognition have to sit on top of the display, which is why most smartphones still come with a punch-hole at the top.

SEE: Tableau business analytics platform: A cheat sheet (free PDF download) (TechRepublic)

For our devices' bulky cutouts to disappear, cameras would have to be integrated under the display meaning that the display needs to be transparent. OTI's team replaced standard cathodes with a new material patterned with small holes that act as microscopic transparent windows, effectively letting light go through the display.

With front-facing cameras and 3D facial recognition sensors moved under the display, not only can the screen be larger and smoother, but transparent displays also come with higher brightness and longer battery life. Helander hopes this will bring about new designs for phones, and also laptops, tablets and foldable devices, as well as AR and VR hardware.

"OLED displays are a massive and growing market," says Helander. "There is a lot of excitement about the technology expanding into laptops and monitors. We see it as an opportunity to innovate when it comes to the convergence of display and sensors."

Behind OTI's innovative product is a so-called "materials discovery platform" and powering that platform, equally as innovative techniques. "At OTI Lumionics we are developing advanced materials by design using quantum simulations, machine learning and real-world testing in pilot production," proudlystates the company's pitch.

There is a good reason that Helander's interest in quantum was piqued four years ago: the technology, although still in its infancy, is expected to break new ground in the field of molecular simulation. For the CEO of a company that describes itself as a designer of advanced materials for the electronics sector, that is enough to justify digging deeper.

From early on, Helander's strategy has consisted of using a computer-based approach to electronic material design. As a small company, OTI was never equipped with armies of chemists ready to test and trial thousands of different molecular designs in the lab until a winning combination was found. "The way we develop materials has been heavily based on the use of computational techniques in chemical and material design," explains Helander.

"But it turns out that even state-of-the-art classical computational chemistry, for a lot of these difficult problems, is inadequate," he continues. "Either they can't reach a high enough level of accuracy, or, if the theory is accurate enough, it becomes an intractable problem that requires a supercomputer to solve."

Quantum computing, and its ability to leverage the odd behavior of qubits to solve many calculations at once, seemed at first glance an ideal match. Qubits could be used to predict how the complex alignment of many different compounds could result in particular properties for a given electronic material, as well as how this material would interact with other molecules in a device and they could, in principle, do this faster and more accurately than any existing classical methods.

Around the same time, long-established quantum champion IBM published the results of an experiment showing that simple molecules like hydrogencould be simulatedby a universal gate-based quantum system. The stars were aligned; the odds were in favor of quantum-based molecular simulation; and OTI's chemists started getting excited about the implications for computational chemistry.

They quickly found themselves facing a limiting factor. With less than a hundred qubits currently sitting in most quantum computers, there wasn't much that could actually be done. "To solve an industrial-sized problem, you need more qubits than will be scientifically feasible in the next ten to 20 years," says Helander. "But as a small company, we don't have the resources to invest in a long R&D program of that kind."

SEE: Less is more: IBM achieves quantum computing simulation for new materials with fewer qubits

Like any CEO, Helander's interest lies in short-to-near-term business value; and so, he decided to tackle the problem with an entirely new perspective. If the number of qubits available couldn't match the size of the problem, then the problem had to be re-made to match the number of qubits at hand.

"That's actually a gap in theory," says Helander. "So I started with a group of theoreticians. I told them to forget everything they knew about computational chemistry, and imagine a new set of computational chemistry representation to map to a qubit space. What would that look like?"

There is a long-standing problem in the quantum space, argues Helander: instead of developing brand-new programs that are tailored for quantum hardware, scientists apply classical models to qubits. As it turns out, however, the way problems are represented in the classical world doesn't always sit well with small-scale, hardware-constrained quantum computers.

Take the unitary coupled cluster that is, chemists' jargon to describe the technique used to represent chemical systems. According to Helander, that particular classical representation is highly inefficient when mapped onto a quantum computer, and requires large numbers of qubits and gate operations. Instead, OTI's researchersdeveloped a brand-new "qubit coupled cluster method,"adapted specially for quantum systems.

For Helander, if the number of qubits available couldn't match the size of the problem, then the problem had to be re-made to match the number of qubits at hand.

"In order to see value with limited hardware, you have to develop native code and write low-level stuff," says Helander. "We developed that first native representation of the problem we wanted to solve, for quantum computers."

Theory was promptly built into software and, equipped with a bunch of new quantum-ready algorithms, OTI's team tested the technology in cloud-based quantum computers. The researchers, however, couldn't let go of an ongoing feeling of frustration at the nevertheless limited hardware, at the lack of error correction, at the stubborn levels of noise, and often at all three at the same time.

This is when Helander started looking closer at quantum-inspired techniques, a branch of the field that looks at ways to apply quantum-optimized algorithms to classical hardware. With a new set of custom-built, highly efficient quantum algorithms, wondered the CEO, why not try and run the software on regular CPUs and GPUs?

SEE: BMW explores quantum computing to boost supply chain efficiencies

A partnership with Microsoft soon followed, and OTI's team started using the Redmond giant'sAzure Quantum platform, which is designed to run quantum-inspired algorithms on classical Azure hardware. In principle, by using sophisticated optimization techniques, Azure Quantum enables users to reap the rewards of quantum computing approaches while using classical devices.

Last year, in a blog post, Microsoft announced that the project was showing signs of success: OTI had effectivelydemonstrated meaningful resultson commercially relevant sized problems. Specifically, the company had completed the simulation of a green light-emitting OLED material known as Alq3 a problem that would have required 42 error-corrected qubits on gate-based quantum hardware.

For Helander, the experiment showed the promise of much nearer-term value to be drawn from quantum-inspired algorithms, and their potential to start drawing benefits from quantum computers without needing to use them directly.

The company completed the simulation of a green light-emitting OLED material known as Alq3, which would have required 42 error-corrected qubits on gate-based quantum hardware.

That is not to say that OTI has ruled out using pure quantum hardware. Quite the opposite: the company is working with D-Wave, which provides a cloud-based quantum annealer that is much easier to control than the gate-based quantum computers operated by companies like IBM or Rigetti. This means that D-Wave can offer a technology that is already several thousands of qubits-strong, and that can reach the industrial relevance that Helander and his team are looking for, without error.

Helander and his team, therefore, share their time between classical techniques, quantum-inspired approaches and purely quantum-based experiments.

"At the moment, our quantum techniques focus a lot on theory development and optimization," says Helander. "For our current product, for example, we applied a combination of all the different tools that we had classical simulations, quantum systems and quantum-inspired algorithms."

SEE: Microsoft's quantum cloud computing plans take another big step forward

"We still heavily combine our quantum methods with classical techniques," he continues. "Even though the amount of value we are driving is only a small subset of our everyday work, from this point forward we're looking at increasing that over time until more of our workflow is adopting quantum and quantum-inspired methods."

While the company, for now, is focusing on high-value OLED displays, Helander is positive that the discoveries led by OTI's research team will generate an avalanche of innovations in many other fields such as battery design and drug development. The technology could effectively replace processes that were until now based on trial-and-error, with highly sophisticated computer models that would rapidly build designs for new molecules from the ground up.

The potential of quantum computing to phenomenally disrupt industries that are hunting for new and improved materials is well-known, but it will be at least a decade before quantum's value translates into real-world results. For those too impatient to wait, however, quantum-inspired methods might provide an early sneak peak of better things to come.

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This company is using quantum-inspired algorithms to help create the OLED displays of the future - ZDNet

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IBM’s new roadmap for quantum computing promises 100x speedups and then some – Neowin

One of the pioneers of quantum computing, IBM, revealed its Quantum Development Roadmap for the future of quantum computers today. It builds on the firm's previous roadmap from September 2020, in which it laid out the pathway towards achieving quantum computing ecosystems comprised of thousands of noise-resilient and stable qubits by 2023. This "inflection point", as IBM puts it, is crucial for the full-scale, commercial realization of quantum computers. Since then, the firm has made significant inroads towards achieving this goal, which has been highlighted in the update unveiled today.

Firstly, this year, IBM is planning on releasing Qiskit runtimean execution environment that speeds up the execution of quantum circuits by as much as 100x. Qiskit runtime achieves this substantial speedup by reducing the latency in the communication between classical and quantum computers. By cutting this latency, workloads that take months to run today can be cut down to a matter of a few hours.

The Qiskit runtime rethinks the classical-quantum workload so that programs will be uploaded and executed on classical hardware located beside quantum hardware, slashing latencies emerging from communication between the users computer and the quantum processor.

One of the primary use cases of quantum computers is the simulation of quantum systems, which is an arduous task for classical computers since the computational complexity required to model a system grows exponentially with respect to its size. Today, a simulation of Lithium hydride (LiH) can take up to 100 days. But with the 100X speedup, this task can be done in one day.

Moreover, Qiskit runtime will be sizing up the capacity to run a greater variety of quantum circuits, allowing developers to run programs developed by others as a service in their own workloads and eventually tackling previously inaccessible problems with quantum computers. With help from the firm's OpenQASM3 assembly language, technologies designed on OpenShift, by 2023, IBM plans on debuting circuit libraries and advanced control systems for manipulating large qubit fabrics.

Cumulatively, IBM boldly claims that come 2023, its quantum systems will be powerful enough to explore major problems with a clear demonstratable advantage over classical computers.

Come 2025, IBM is confident that it will achieve "frictionless quantum computing", a turning point at which the barrier to entry into quantum development will be greatly tamed.

By then, we envision that developers across all levels of the quantum computing stack will rely upon on our advanced hardware with a cloud-based API, working seamlessly with high performance computing resources to push the limits of computation overalland include quantum computation as a natural component of their existing computation pipelines.

And a decade from now, in the 2030s, IBM hopes that our hardware and software prowess will reach the extent that we will be able to run billions and trillions of quantum circuits without even realizing that we are doing so. That would be the era of practical, full-scale commercial quantum computers.

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IBM's new roadmap for quantum computing promises 100x speedups and then some - Neowin

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AI in Healthcare Market Detailed Insights on Upcoming Trends 2020-2030 | DeepMind Technologies Limited, IBM Corporation, Intel Corp – The Courier

AI in HealthcareOverview:

Thelatest report studies the AI in HealthcareMarket in detail and presents comprehensive forecasts regarding the markets growth trajectory in the coming years 2020 to 2030. The research report on the global market offers a detailed look at some of the key elements of the overall market. This report study analyzes and researches the regions such as Asia Pacific, South America, and the Middle East & Africa.

The study has collectively presented refined data characterized by market valuation, SWOT analysis, market participants, regional segmentation, and revenue forecasts, enabling stakeholders to make logical business decisions. The market is anticipated to have the potential to witness flourishing growth with high revenue CAGR valuation. A deep-dive analysis of the business scenario across the various regions and a review of the competitive dynamics covers a major portion of the study as it is pivotal in drafting future courses of action. Individual assessment of the various industry segmentation, inclusive of their market share and growth rate are highlighted.

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The main manufacturers covered in this report:

Nuance Communications, Inc., DeepMind Technologies Limited, IBM Corporation, Intel Corporation and Microsoft and NVIDIA Corporation.

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AI in Healthcare Market report has used a top-down and bottom-up approach to make a complete report on the AI in Healthcare market. Further, it has used reliable data from trusted sources to evaluate and validate the size of the entire market along with its sub-markets. Various qualitative, as well as quantitative research, has been conducted to analyze the AI in Healthcare market thoroughly.

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The report provides an in-depth analysis of theAI in Healthcaremarket. The fetches data in a complex environment where various technologies of automation, mobility, cloud, AI, and others are coupled to offer innovative solutions that help in business decision making. By analyzing various customer data and business growth enablers, enterprises are expected to grow during the forecast period. The report discusses the market size in terms of component, deployment type, industry, and region. Furthermore, the report provides details about the major challenges impacting the market growth.

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Bliss: From one reality to the other, trippy mind-bender keeps us guessing – Chicago Sun-Times

I have a picture in my head of a place. I dont know if its real. Owen Wilsons Greg in Bliss.

In the metaphysical journey that is Bliss, there comes a time when one almost expects Agent Smith from The Matrix to pop in looking for Mr. Anderson, or perhaps McCabe from Vanilla Sky to find our hero on a rooftop and tell him, Mortality as home entertainment this cannot be the future, can it? because we are deep down the rabbit hole and constantly trying to figure out whats real and whats not real in this trippy and entertaining mind-bender from writer-director Mike Cahill.

Bliss: 3 out of 4

You cant help but think of The Matrix and Vanilla Sky (or its precursor, the 1997 Spanish film Abre los ojos) and even The Fisher King as this Amazon Prime Video feature starts off in the real world and then takes us on a fantastical journey in which were pretty sure well, almost sure, well, maybe not entirely sure about which universe is authentic and which exists only in the imagination.

Owen Wilson reminds us he can do so much more than play the preternaturally laidback aging hippie type with an impressively layered performance as Greg, a middle-aged, divorced father who is an executive of some sort at a large company but spends his days ignoring calls, dodging meetings and creating elaborate drawings depicting an idyllic home that looks positively heavenly. Almost too good to be true. Its not entirely clear how long this has been going on, but if Greg thinks hes fooling his co-workers, hes dead wrong and when hes told the big boss wants to see him, it looks like the end of the road for Greg.

Things go sideways in a big way during that meeting with the boss, and at this early point Bliss has the look and feel of a gritty, grounded thriller about a man unraveling, in the vein of Falling Down. Greg finds himself on the street and connecting with an exotically strange and seemingly unhinged woman named Isabel (Salma Hayek in a terrifically theatrical performance), who bears an uncanny resemblance to one of Gregs sketches. How can this be? Isabel tells Greg its proof theyre living in a manufactured world, and nothing they see none of the people, none of the buildings, nothing at all is really there. Its all part of some grand experiment, and only Greg and Isabel can see through it!

Something like that.

You see all these people outside? Isabel says to Greg. Theyre not real. That sounds crazy, of course, but then Isabel starts teaching Greg some mind-blowing tricks, e.g., how to light a candle from across the room simply by pointing at it and wishing it to be so.

Nesta Cooper delivers strong work as Gregs daughter Emily, who is about to graduate high school and is understandably worried about her father yet even as Emilys very existence seems to offer proof Isabels claims are the rantings of a madwoman, Isabel has Gregs head spinning with her explanations of how Emily isnt real, shes just part of the illusion. Greg was never married and he doesnt have children and he never worked at that company; all of those elements are simply part of the SIMS stuff.

Its all madness until theres a startling revelation indicating Isabel might not be so crazy after all, and the Shangri-La envisioned by Greg in his drawings might actually be the real world. Bliss is a strikingly impressive visual feast, as we toggle back and forth between the stark and oppressively gray world where Greg and Isabel are two oddball characters living under a viaduct and the brightly colored and futuristic nirvana where theyre like the grown-up Homecoming Queen and King of a futuristic, advanced community where virtual reality co-mingles with reality.

Im a little disoriented, Greg says at one point, and its the understatement of his lifetime. To the very end, we can feel Gregs sadness when his world seems to be crumbling, his exhilaration when he believes hes found a new and spectacularly beautiful reality, and his heartbreaking confusion when he has to choose between two worlds a choice that might not really be his to make.

The top entertainment stories, features and must-read reviews, sent to you weekly.

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5 simple desk yoga poses to calm your mind and relieve tension while working from home – Insider – INSIDER

Most of us could benefit from doing more yoga, but if you struggle to find the time, desk yoga could be the solution.

While chair yoga (a more accessible, inclusive form of the practice) and stretching at your desk aren't new concepts, desk yoga is currently proving more beneficial than ever, both for body and mind, for the swathes of people around the world who have been working from home.

Chair yoga is usually pitched to seniors, but London-based yoga teacher and founder of The Yeh Yoga Co. Emily Harding believes it's something we should all be doing, and reframing the practice as "desk yoga" has seen increasing interest from frazzled employees.

Harding has been offering desk yoga for two years, and originally came up with the idea through working with big corporations whose employees felt like they weren't able to fit classic yoga into their day. With desk yoga, you don't need to go anywhere, don't need to change, and don't need much time.

Read more: Asos is facing backlash from yoga teachers who say its models are performing poses incorrectly and dangerously in product images

It helps with posture, relieves tension in the neck and shoulders, reduces eye strain which in turn can ease headaches, and helps people feel connected to themselves, calmer, and less anxious by focusing on the breath, according to Harding.

"Yoga isn't just about practicing on a mat in your leggings," she told Insider, adding that she wants to combat the stereotype that "yoga is only for thin, flexible, white women."

"Yoga has been around for thousands of years. It's about freeing yourself from the suffering of your mind which doesn't just pop up when you step on four corners of the mat, it's in your whole life," Harding said.

Hardingtalked Insider through five easy poses (that only require pulling your chair back from your desk) and how to perform them correctly, whatever your ability, from your home office.

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5 simple desk yoga poses to calm your mind and relieve tension while working from home - Insider - INSIDER

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Fish don’t seem to mind the snowy weather – Plumas County Newspapers

Compiled by Mari Erin Roth

[emailprotected]

Lake Almanor

This past weeks series of storms dropped more than three feet of snow at lake level. Water temps fell a couple of degrees and ice is beginning to form in and around coves. Another storm landed this week, Monday and Tuesday, which brought more rain than snow.

Water clarity is down to five feet and temps were ranging between 36-39 degrees. Hamilton Branch is depositing dirty water and visibility at the branch is a foot at best. If we receive a significant amount of rain, shore fishing will be wiped out for at least a couple of days with muddy water deposited into Almanor from all our tributaries, said John Crotty reporting in from Almanor Fishing Association. Fishing conditions change daily for both bank and boat fishermen. Geritol was unfishable yesterday due to ice and Hamilton Branch was barely fishable, said Crotty on Sunday, Jan. 31.

A change in weather conditions is expected to begin Wednesday, Feb. 3, through at least next weekend. Trollers, as conditions improve, I would recommend concentrating your efforts on the south end of the lake and branching out to other areas as conditions permit, suggests Crotty. Keep it simple, find bait/fish and stay on them, they will eat eventually. I target fish in the top 15 feet early in the day and rarely fish deeper than 30 feet this time of year. While you will mark bait and fish deeper I have found the biters 25 feet and shallower.

The Canyon Dam ramp is clear and open. Lake level is increasing daily and fishermen will need rubber boats to get onto the dock when launching. Be safe and call ahead for current weather and fishing conditions, said Crotty.

Lake Davis

Jeanne Graham at J&J Grizzly Store reports that, Yes the lake is frozen. Since the second week of January there has no open water left at Mallard. Ice is reported to be from 6 to 8 inches from Mallard down to the dam. Remember the ice is not officially monitored and the information above is as reported by fishermen. It is up to you to decide if it is safe or not for you to go out on, said Jeanne.

Over 1.5 feet of snow built up at the lake Jan. 27 and 28. Could not get to my normal measuring spot unless I wanted to wade through hip deep snow, snow amount is probably higher, said Jeanne. Snowed at least 95 percent of the day yesterday (Jan. 27). Currently snowing now. Had a very loud wakeup call around 5 a.m. when the snow started sliding off the roof!

The annual February Davis Lake derby is not a sure thing. If I were a betting person, I would say its not going to happen as a derby, said Jeanne. The Maybe Ice Derby is tentatively scheduled for Feb. 13. The Fathers Day Weekend Derby is still planned for June 19.

Send your fishing stories and pictures to [emailprotected] for inclusion in this regular article.

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Fish don't seem to mind the snowy weather - Plumas County Newspapers

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Lets build on the innovation shown by UK tech during pandemic – ComputerWeekly.com

The past year has been hugely challenging as the Covid-19 pandemic caused lives to be lost and put the UKs economy under massive strain. The governments response has been significant, even if it has been frequently criticised. But whatever the debates, we mustnt lose sight of the incredible innovation rooted in technology that the UK has shown and it is vital that we find ways to maintain and build on this as we move forward post-Brexit.

There were many ways that technology proved its essential value through the pandemic remote working, Zoom and Teams, shared collaboration platforms. One other key area where tech really came of age in 2020 and in which the UK has really led the way has been in medical and scientific research, harnessing the power of artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and big data to drive innovation and discovery in the real world.

The use of AI has been crucial to the development of the vaccines against Covid-19, such as the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine upon which all our immediate futures now depend. Machine learning systems and computational analyses helped researchers understand the virus and its structure, and predict which components will provoke an immune response. They will also help scientists track the virus genetic mutations over time. From all the huge datasets collected, AI is enabling scientists to perform analyses they simply wouldnt have been able to in the past.

Another key area is to use AI to track and analyse all the inevitable reports of adverse reactions to the vaccines over time. The UKs Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) is reportedly planning to use an AI tool to do that. The MHRA expects there could be between 50,000 and 100,000 reports of suspected side-effects for every 100 million doses over a six to 12-month period. Only AI could handle a task of that size.

Meanwhile, tech companies are also collaborating to use tech to create digital Covid vaccination passports the Vaccination Credential Initiative.

Separately, AI has been behind another UK breakthrough that has caused huge excitement amongst scientists DeepMind was used to determine a proteins 3D shape from its amino acid sequence. The DeepMind program, called Alpha Fold, achieved something that many scientists did not expect to see in their lifetime. It could hugely accelerate efforts to understand the building blocks of cells and enable quicker and more advanced drug discovery, heralding a revolution in biology.

These are all truly exciting developments. Through the Oxford vaccine in particular, the eyes of the world are on the UK and this is something we need to build on to be a leading player on the global stage.

Brexit has now taken place. It was a great boost that, as part of the deal, the UK will continue to take part in Europes flagship 85bn scientific/medical research programme, Horizon Europe, as our relationship and collaboration with Europe will obviously remain critically important.

At the same time, we need to raise our eyes and look beyond European borders. The USs new Biden presidency, for example, holds new opportunities. There are trade deals around the world to be done. We need to look for new avenues to scale and commercialise all the superb technological and scientific innovation going on right here in the UK.

To keep up the momentum, the government has a key role to play in creating positive ecosystems for investment in technology, science and research. Much of this comes down to public policy levers, such as access to the right levels of public and commercial funding, incentives and reliefs for R&D, regulation that encourages innovation rather than blocks it, and regional investment to make good on the levelling up promise to stimulate thriving activity beyond the golden triangle of London-Oxford-Cambridge.

It also comes down to the message that we project about UK plc and the primacy that we place on technology and research. We need to train and develop our own talent but also continue to attract the best from around the world. To do this, brilliant individuals need to have confidence that they are truly welcome, that there is long-term backing for projects here and that these projects have the profile and recognition they deserve. Getting the messaging right will be a key ingredient for future success.

We are only at the beginning of what emerging technology is capable of there is so much more to come. The UK has put itself in a leading position and we must do everything possible to sustain it.

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How to heal the ‘mass trauma’ of Covid-19 – BBC News

National commemoration is more important still. In offering meaning-making and a channel for grief, it processes mass trauma on its own scale. A top-down commemoration is only enhanced when combined with bottom-up approaches art, local memorials, digital archives, and simply people's personal memories now more shareable than ever with the second-by-second of social media.

Covid-19 commemoration efforts are underway and already appear promising. In the UK, amid the complexity and muddied character of the pandemic, the national narrative looks set to centre on the role of the NHS and key workers: a meaning-making framework both cross-partisan, deeply symbolic, and rich with social lessons. As well as the real-time commemoration of the "Clap For Carers", a moment of silence was declared for the evening of 4 July, prior to the NHS's birthday the following day. There have been calls for a "999" monument in central London, a monument to NHS workers at the National Arboretum, and a memorial to deceased transport workers at Victoria Station.

Together with Katharine Millar and Yuna Han at LSE, though, Bayly is keen for Covid-19's "common dead", the greater mass of national trauma, to be explicitly recognised, too. They've recommended a national Covid-19 remembrance day for the UK next year as a "key area for government policy".

"We're really keen that it would be a day people are not expected to work," says Millar. The government hitting the national pause button "would be an effective way to formally hold base in the public conversation and collective experience to recognise loss and trauma and suffering". Plus, the pandemic has been so sustained, so long-tailed, that it badly needs a "bookend", Millar suggests. It would be a deadline to mark a horizon, and balance the past and future.

A turning point?

Covid-19 is a mass trauma the likes of which we've never seen before. Our most complex social extensions, and the building-blocks of our personal realities, have been coloured indelibly. The ways we live and work together, and view each other as common citizens: everything means something different in the viral era, and with potentially traumatic effect.

All pandemics end, however. And this one will. But to forget the trauma, move on, and pay it no mind, won't help. It'd be a disservice to history and our own minds. Maybe to the future, too.

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Short afternoon naps may aid cognitive function as we age – Medical News Today

Sleep patterns often change as we age, with many older people adding an afternoon snooze to their daily schedule. The meaning of such naps has been unclear: Do they help keep the mind agile, or do they signify incipient dementia? A new study may have the answer.

Older people who take afternoon naps score more highly on cognitive tests than their non-snoozing contemporaries. These nappers exhibit stronger cognitive function, including memory, orientation, and language.

This study, which appears in General Psychiatry, is the first to explore the relationship of napping to cognitive function and biochemistry in older populations.

People are living longer, and as the authors mention in their study with dementia affecting 57% of adults aged over 65 years worldwide, its diagnosis is a common occurrence. In Western countries, the rate of dementia is slightly higher at 810%.

Since there is currently no cure for dementia, there is clear value in identifying lifestyle changes that can help reduce the chances of developing the condition.

With disturbed sleep patterns having known associations with dementia, the role of napping in older cognitive health is an obvious area of interest. Unfortunately, previous findings have been inconsistent, say the authors of the current study.

For example, they cite 2012 research that found afternoon naps delay the onset of dementia, and yet another study concluding afternoon sleepiness may increase the risk of dementia or cognitive decline.

The researchers studied 2,214 healthy people from several large Chinese cities, including Beijing, Shanghai, and Xian. All were at least 60 years old.

The average night-time sleep interval of study participants was 6.5 hours.

To evaluate existing dementia, the researchers tested participants using the Beijing version of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment and the Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE).

The team evaluated participants cognitive ability and higher function through 30 measurements of visual space, memory, naming, attention, calculation, abstract, orientation, and language function.

The researchers used the Chinese Neuropsychological Test Battery to measure digit span, auditory verbal learning, associative learning, visual retention, language fluency, mapping, and a test with blocks.

The researchers assessed all participants health while profiling their blood for cholesterol levels and triglyceride fatty acids, or TG.

For the purposes of the study, the team defined a nap as anywhere from 5 minutes to 2 hours of sleep after lunch.

Of the group, 1,534 reported regularly taking an afternoon nap, with the frequency of their snoozes ranging from once a week to every day.

The study reports three main results:

The higher TG levels were within a normal range, and therefore may not have impaired cognitive function in the studys participants.

However, the authors note that not all naps are alike.

The study found that longer and more frequent naps tended to be associated with poor cognitive function.

Short and less frequent naps lasting less than 30 minutes and occurring four times a week appear to be the most helpful.

These naps lead to an 84% decrease in the chances of developing Alzheimers.

In addition, people who deliberately nap, instead of simply dozing off in place, are more likely to acquire cognitive benefits.

The researchers suggest that their conclusions may differ from previous contrary research due to the differences in the napping styles studied. The current study is unique in investigating nap frequency.

Also, while some other studies looked primarily into different nap durations, the current research caps it at 2 hours. In addition, they bring unintentional or intentional napping into analysis while we only assessed afternoon napping (i.e., post-lunch).

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