Encryption systems rely on “random” numbers, but conventional computers can’t generate them perfectly. New research shows that quantum physics can.
The randomness in quantum physics is imperfect and needs amplification to be considered truly random, the researchers say.
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Scientists create perfectly random numbers using entangled quantum chips for first time
Researchers at ETH Zurich have developed a method to generate what they describe as ...
Google's open-source diffusion language model generates 256 tokens in parallel and self-corrects, hitting 4x speed on one GPU ...
Quick question: how did you learn to code? It probably wasn’t bribing someone a year or two ahead of you in CS to finish all ...
Abstract: In the contemporary digital landscape, security has become a vital element of our existence. The growing volume of sensitive information being stored and transmitted over networks ...
This can be either a fixed number, e.g. 3, or we can use the special value <code>Eigen::Dynamic</code> to indicate that we don't know the number of rows and/or columns at compile time.
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