pm_me_wet_kittehs
pm_me_wet_kittehs t1_j4f6lii wrote
Reply to comment by Doc891 in NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test Is a Smashing Success - Eos by donutloop
space is big. really big. you just wouldn't believe how hugely, mind bogglingly big it is.
pm_me_wet_kittehs t1_j1qg1oa wrote
Reply to comment by KAMSPioneer in An IBM Quantum Computer Will Soon Pass the 1,000-Qubit Mark by giuliomagnifico
for symmetric algorithms, a quantum computer would turn 256 bits of security into the equivalent of "Only" 128 bits. Double the key length amd any advantage just goes up in smoke. quantum won't help in a practical manner for AES
pm_me_wet_kittehs t1_j1qfjt9 wrote
Reply to comment by workerMcWorkin in An IBM Quantum Computer Will Soon Pass the 1,000-Qubit Mark by giuliomagnifico
pretty much anything that current tech can do efficiently, is not a problem a quantum computer can, and vice versa.
pm_me_wet_kittehs t1_j0k6o9k wrote
Reply to comment by Thatingles in NASA's DART asteroid smash flung 2 million pounds of rock into space by shellystarzz
I need it to be expressed in football fields
pm_me_wet_kittehs t1_iycch4a wrote
Reply to comment by acctforspms in Rolls-Royce successfully tests hydrogen-powered jet engine | Britain's Rolls-Royce said it has successfully run an aircraft engine on hydrogen, a world aviation first that marks a major step towards proving the gas could be key to decarbonising air travel. by yourSAS
but the plane is made of aluminium!
pm_me_wet_kittehs t1_jdbycpx wrote
Reply to comment by erasmause in Google and Microsoft’s chatbots are already citing one another in a misinformation shitshow by altmorty
nope, they are unequivocally nondeterministic.
simple proof? submit the exact same prompt twice. you don't get the same output. You would if the system was merely chaotic, because the input is exactly the same.
Therefore there must be an element of randomness in there