Today we said goodbye to our Pesa a Siamese fighting fish. she was graceful and beautiful. You will be missed

luis ricardo 71 has added a photo to the pool:

Today we said goodbye to our Pesa a Siamese fighting fish. she was graceful and beautiful. You will be missed

MetaFilter

The past 24 hours of MetaFilter

Rockets & Penises in the Persian Gulf

Prick waving, redux.. NSFW language and metaphors from George Carlin, 1992. A perennial Oldie but Goodie.

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Unpacking the deceptively simple science of tokenomics

Inference at scale is much more complex than more GPUs, more tokens, more profits

feature  By now you've probably heard AI datacenters called factories. It's an apt description: power goes in and tokens come out.…

Formula 1 News

Formula 1® - The Official F1® Website

What To Watch For in the season opener in Australia

Chris Medland picks out five key things to keep an eye on when the lights go out for the season opener at Albert Park in Melbourne.

What are the tactical options for the Australian GP?

Matt Youson takes a look at the different pit stop and tyre options that are available to the teams for the season opener at the Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne.

Let's Go to Nevis

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Let's Go to Nevis

Found Kodachrome Slide

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Kodachrome Slide

date stamped on slide April 1973

ajpscs posted a photo:

the SQUARE
© ajpscs

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Corendon-repatriëringsvlucht uit Oman uitgesteld om veiligheid

DEN HAAG (ANP) - Een nieuwe repatriëringsvlucht van Muscat in Oman naar Amsterdam is uitgesteld "vanwege de veiligheidssituatie". Dat meldt het ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken over de vlucht van Corendon, die zaterdagmiddag zou vertrekken.

Zaterdagochtend landde wel een ander vliegtuig uit Muscat op Schiphol. In die repatriëringsvlucht, uitgevoerd door KLM, zaten 281 mensen, onder wie 263 Nederlanders.


Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

China Releases First Homegrown Quantum Computing OS

The Global Times reports: China's first domestically developed quantum computer operating system, Origin Pilot, has been made available for online download, the Global Times learned from the Anhui Quantum Computing Engineering Research Center on Wednesday. A Chinese scientist said while several quantum computing operating system efforts are underway worldwide, this is the first developed in China where it is seen as part of China's broad effort to achieve technology independence and to achieve technology advance in quantum computing.

The center said the release marks the world's first open-source quantum computer operating system available for public download, which is expected to lower development barriers and support the growth of China's quantum computing ecosystem. Developed by Hefei-based Origin Quantum Computing Technology Co, the company behind China's third-generation superconducting quantum computer, Origin Wukong, Origin Pilot was first launched in 2021 and has gone through multiple rounds of iteration and upgrade.

The developer describes it as an integrated quantum-classical-intelligent computing operating system compatible with major hardware approaches, including superconducting qubits, trapped ions and neutral atoms. It is now deployed on the company's Origin Wukong series and is available to external users, the company said. Guo Guoping, chief scientist of Origin Quantum and director at the Anhui Quantum Computing Engineering Research Center, told the Global Times that a quantum operating system is the "soft heart" of the quantum computing ecosystem. He said the decision to make Origin Pilot available globally marks a shift in China's quantum computing industry from closed-door tech innovation to broader open-source ecosystem development. Dou Menghan, head of the research team, said: "Users can quickly integrate with quantum chips of multiple physical types and, using autonomous programming frameworks such as QPanda, execute quantum computing jobs across different physical quantum chips to support both research and commercialization needs."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.