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UK startup secures extra Β£5m for its rented home technology

Switchee hopes to use funds to hit goal of preventing cold and damp in social housing properties

A British startup which uses technology to prevent renters from living in cold, damp homes has raised fresh funds to expand as landlords belatedly try to tackle outbreaks of mould in crumbling social housing.

Switchee has secured Β£5m, split equally between an existing investor, AXA IM Alts, and Octopus Ventures, part of the group which includes household gas and electricity supplier Octopus Energy.

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Β© Photograph: Andy Griffin/Switchee

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Β© Photograph: Andy Griffin/Switchee

Why every quantum computer will need a powerful classical computer

Image of a set of spheres with arrows within them, with all the arrows pointing in the same direction.

Enlarge / A single logical qubit is built from a large collection of hardware qubits. (credit: at digit)

One of the more striking things about quantum computing is that the field, despite not having proven itself especially useful, has already spawned a collection of startups that are focused on building something other than qubits. It might be easy to dismiss this as opportunismβ€”trying to cash in on the hype surrounding quantum computing. But it can be useful to look at the things these startups are targeting, because they can be an indication of hard problems in quantum computing that haven't yet been solved by any one of the big companies involved in that spaceβ€”companies like Amazon, Google, IBM, or Intel.

In the case of a UK-based company called Riverlane, the unsolved piece that is being addressed is the huge amount of classical computations that are going to be necessary to make the quantum hardware work. Specifically, it's targeting the huge amount of data processing that will be needed for a key part of quantum error correction: recognizing when an error has occurred.

Error detection vs. the data

All qubits are fragile, tending to lose their state during operations, or simply over time. No matter what the technologyβ€”cold atoms, superconducting transmons, whateverβ€”these error rates put a hard limit on the amount of computation that can be done before an error is inevitable. That rules out doing almost every useful computation operating directly on existing hardware qubits.

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That's called cultural appropriation

Vincent Horn described the a recent episode of Buddhist Geeks as a departure for the podcast. He explained he would be monologuing to explain the Jhāna Drama.

What follows is a fascinating critique of the start-up Jhourney which plans to help practitioners enter a blissful meditative state rapidly and repeatedly through biofeedback. However, as Ross Anderson in the Atlantic Reports, experienced meditators are skeptical. Horns critique, based on his experience consulting during a Jhorney retreat, include but goes beyond skepticism, exploring issues of trauma induced during mediation retreats, cultural appropriation, and the corporatization of Buddhism. He also uses it as an opportunity to promote his own Jhana community, seemingly made in response to his experience at Jhourney.
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