Quantum key distribution, human minds changing “Reality”…

Thousands of kilometres of existing fibre may be used to carry quantum codes…

The “uncrackable codes” made by exploiting the branch of physics called quantum mechanics have been for the first time sent down kilometres of standard broadband fibre. [1] This “quantum key distribution” has until now needed a dedicated fibre separate from that used to carry data. Sending faint, delicate quantum keys required dedicated, so-called “dark fibres”, with no other light signals present. That was an inherently costly prospect for users who had to install or lease a separate fibre. But a new technique reported in Physical Review X shows how to unpick normal data streams from the much fainter, more delicate quantum signal. The quantum key distribution or QKD idea is based on the old idea of sharing of a key between two parties. Tiny, faint pulses of laser light are used in a bid to make single photons with a given alignment, or polarisation. Two different polarisations can act like the 0s and 1s of normal digital data, forming a means to share a cryptographic key. What makes it secure is that once single photons have been observed, they are irrevocably changed. An eavesdropper trying to intercept the key would be found out.

Philosophers have postulated the idea of us affecting (and creating) what we call “Reality” for thousands of years. Ideas like that sounded weird (at best) and were discarded by mainstream philosophers and common people who where afraid to see anything beyond their nose. Now we have surpassed the point of discussion and have directly reached to the point of solid everyday applications of that “weird” concept… Thank you technology!

No matter how illogical it may sound, remember in the near future that your data is protected by that very “illogical” thing…

Pigeons win Broadband in data transfer rate. True. Scary.

Everything is a matter of perception. And it is true that the perception of the “fast Internet we cannot live without” is part of our modern culture. However it takes a small pigeon to see more clearly what your blind eyes cannot.

It is true. In many occasions have pigeons won the locan Broadband Internet connection in data transfer rate. [1, 2, 3] The pigeons carried a USB stick with the data to send and was let loose to fly, while at the same time the same data was sent via the Internet to the same destination. When the pigeon arrived, the data being sent through the broadband was not even halfway there…

Comparisons based on an average Internet connection of 2.85 Mbps. If now [11/2012] California has a speed of 5 Mbps, just send a bigger 64 GB USB stick with your pigeon…
The comparisons in the schemas above [4] are revealing. Modern axioms are too easy to challenge. All you have to do is just ask the question and the answer will just pop right in front of you. Lies, myths, “implied truths”. This is what our world is all about in almost every aspect of it.

Surely the data transfer rates are much higher now.

But so is the data capacity of the USB sticks pigeons carry…

Get rid of your wrong axioms. Stop believing dogmatically in technology.

See clearly in the sky. And you might see a USB flying…

As a wise man once said, “never underestimate the bandwidth of a truck loaded with thousands of DVDs”…

Back to mobiles with buttons… Back to PHONES….

I recently went back to using a mobile phone with good old-fashioned buttons. No touch screen! And it seems as if I got my phone back!

It is not that I am old fashioned. I am using computers since I was 8 years old, have programmed since Commodore and I still do. I have used Visual Studio 2012 before it went public for mainstream users and have been a Windows 8 user well before magazines worldwide announced its public release.

It is just that I want a phone to make… phone calls! Not another computer!

With my “old new” phone with buttons I can at last call a person with 2 clicks instead of endless finger scrolling in order to find the “phone function”, then find the contact I want to call and the press the “call” virtual button (because modern phones can do much more things with a contact than just call him… I wouldn’t like to make a false “Like” on Facebook or share a photo instead…).

With my buttons phone I can at last have my phone in my pocket without fear of unlocking it by accident. And I do not have all those motives used for screen locking, which make it so hard to make an emergency call when you need to do so. I can actually use it even when I am not actually looking at it, just by sensing the buttons. (I never really understood what is the point of having a touch screen only to visualize and simulate buttons on it, which you already had…)

Modern mobile phones with touch screens can do a whole bunch of things but give you a really hard time making the most evident of them all.

Much more stable and quick, without having to load mobile antivirus (or be afraid of your mobile being taken hostage by a trojan), use Task Manager or an optimization tool to clear the RAM in order to call home, old phones seem more like a super tool with amazing capabilities which we all miss from our every day lives.

YES~!

It can actually P-H-O-N-E to people!

New York Times, Internet, medium…

Staffers at the New York Times briefly walked out Monday afternoon in protest of the management’s position on contract negotiations. [1] Among others, the newspaper’s owners call for separate contracts for print and digital employees…

Yes, we live in the era of “appearances”…

Internet appears less… (what?) … so editors for the Internet edition of the paper must be paid…less?

Well, perhaps the even more amazing thing is not the fact that we look at appearances, but that we actually select (Internet does play the major role today, people DO recognize that reading a book on paper is more “serious business” than reading a web page) the thing which appears lesser in quality…

From oral speech and Socrates, to written books and Aristotle…

From written books and Wittgenstein, to Internet and… noone!

Progress…

Civilization…

Sophos, viruses, not so “sophos”…

Sophos has admitted that it suffered a false positive incident last night when its own anti-virus software began detecting an update as malware. [1] For most people a computer virus is a “bad” thing. However few people actually understand that usual update programs actually replicate many of the functions of a computer virus, even the “harm the target computer” one…

Perception is a powerful tool of distraction.

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