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    honeywell

    Explore " honeywell" with insightful episodes like "A Homeless Payday; More Tech, More Problems; Airline Cockpit Safety", "Commercial Airline Cockpit Safety Alerts", "Guest: Dr. Thomas Evans of Honeywell on meeting automation goals; Skills gaps in finding new workers; How do we tell when we are at the bottom of the transportation trough?", "Why quantum computing is the next industrial revolution – Quantinuum CPO, Ilyas Khan" and "Flying vehicles could be landing in Greater Phoenix - David Shilliday" from podcasts like ""The TechMobility Podcast", "TechMobility Topics", "Logistics Matters with DC VELOCITY", "UKTN | The Podcast" and "Greater Phoenix A to Z"" and more!

    Episodes (25)

    A Homeless Payday; More Tech, More Problems; Airline Cockpit Safety

    A Homeless Payday; More Tech, More Problems; Airline Cockpit Safety

    A non-profit community group gave recently homeless folks $7500 each.  We peek in to find out what happened next.  A recent J.D. Power tech survey reveals that the more tech is found in today's vehicles, the more problematic they are, we discuss.  Finally, federal safety officials want pilots and airlines to avail themselves of additional safety features that will keep many safe, while on the ground.  

    Support the show

    Be sure to tell your friends to tune in to The TechMobility Show!

    Commercial Airline Cockpit Safety Alerts

    Commercial Airline Cockpit Safety Alerts

    Federal safety officials want commercial airlines to install or activate additional safety features that will keep planes safe during ground operations, such as take-off, landing and moving along on taxiways. 

    Support the show

    Tell your friends to tune into TechMobility Topics. New episodes are posted every Tuesday!

    Guest: Dr. Thomas Evans of Honeywell on meeting automation goals; Skills gaps in finding new workers; How do we tell when we are at the bottom of the transportation trough?

    Guest: Dr. Thomas Evans of Honeywell on meeting automation goals; Skills gaps in finding new workers; How do we tell when we are at the bottom of the transportation trough?

    Our guest on this week's episode is Dr. Thomas Evans, robotics chief technology officer for Honeywell. Supply chains have been roughed up quite a bit this year, with transportation in a recession and many warehouse projects on hold throughout the industry. Yet, even with the current economic climate, buyers are still making investments in warehouse robotics, but possibly smaller investments than they would like. In this environment, what can logistics companies do to hit their long-term goals for automation? Our guest shares some insights.

    It’s getting harder to find the right talent in the supply chain, especially when it comes to filling leadership roles and developing the next generation of corporate supply chain managers. That’s according to a recent survey by Alcott Global, a Singapore-based supply chain and logistics recruitment and talent management firm.  Half of those surveyed listed the lack of talent as a key problem.  On top of that, the survey showed that the talent that is available lacks the right skill set needed to succeed in supply chain management.

    Freight markets have been down quite a bit this summer and it makes managers wonder if we have seen the bottom of the cyclical trough. A new report from U.S. Bank offers some data points that may shed some light on how long the freight recession will last.

    DC Velocity's sister publication CSCMP's Supply Chain Quarterly  offers a podcast series called Supply Chain in the Fast Lane.  It is co-produced with the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals.  The current series features Transportation Tech. Go to your favorite podcast platform to subscribe and to listen to past and future episodes.


    Articles and resources mentioned in this episode:

    Podcast is sponsored by:PERC - The Propane Education and Research Council

    Other links

    Why quantum computing is the next industrial revolution – Quantinuum CPO, Ilyas Khan

    Why quantum computing is the next industrial revolution – Quantinuum CPO, Ilyas Khan

    Ilyas Khan, CPO and founder of Quantinuum, explains why quantum computers have the potential to radically change everything about how computing works, how the top prize in quantum has generated a geopolitical race, and what it’s like quietly building a deep tech multi-corn. 

     

    Khan is the founder of Cambridge Quantum, which in 2021 merged with US-based Honeywell to create Quantinuum, a deep tech company developing scalable quantum computers. 

    Flying vehicles could be landing in Greater Phoenix - David Shilliday

    Flying vehicles could be landing in Greater Phoenix - David Shilliday

    What a conversation! Host Casey Gilchrist is joined by David Shilliday, Vice President and General Manager of Urban Air Mobility and Unmanned Aerial Systems at Honeywell, and GPEC's Thomas Maynard to talk about flying electric vehicles, also known as electric vertical take-off and landing vehicles (eVTOL). Maybe not The Jetsons (YET), but we're not far away as this technology is evolving fast, and much of that evolution is taking place right here in Greater Phoenix. 

    Follow GPEC for the latest Greater Phoenix news:

    • LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/greaterphx
    • Twitter: twitter.com/GPEC
    • Facebook: facebook.com/GreaterPHX
    • Instagram: instagram.com/GreaterPHX
    • YouTube: youtube.com/GreaterPHX
    • LINE: https://bit.ly/49mMBd2

    22. Dana Kokoska - Student Community Steward, Part-Time Artist, and Full-Time Electrical Engineer in Training

    22. Dana Kokoska - Student Community Steward, Part-Time Artist, and Full-Time Electrical Engineer in Training

    Introducing Dana Kokoska (ECE 2T0 + PEY)

    Dana Kokoska is an Electrical Engineering graduate of the University of Toronto. While at U of T, she held many leadership roles in artistic and community-building/outreach activities, such as Vice-Chair Marketing for F!rosh Week in 2020, Director of Hi-Skule, Resident Advisor at Girls Leadership In Engineering Experience (GLEE), and Graphics Executive on the Frosh Handbook Committee. When she graduated in 2021, she was named a 'Grad to Watch' and received the L.E. (Ted) Jones Award of Distinction from the Engineering Alumni Network.

    Read Dana's letter to first-year engineering students during Frosh 2022 here: https://dearfrosh.com/dana.html

    Resources mentioned with Links

    How to get in touch with Dana

    Submit to our Suggestion Box if you have a great guest idea or request!

    This podcast is supported by the Hart House Good Ideas Fund, the Department of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering, the Department of Chemical Engineering, and the Engineering Alumni Network, all at the University of Toronto.

    Music from Uppbeat: https://uppbeat.io/t/sonda/were-in-it-together. License code: AT02WGQJBZNM4PMH

    Guest: Jenny Vander Zanden of Breakthrough on the challenges that shippers face; More turbulence in air freight; Meeting sustainability goals

    Guest: Jenny Vander Zanden of Breakthrough on the challenges that shippers face; More turbulence in air freight; Meeting sustainability goals

    Our guest on this week's episode is Jenny Vander Zanden, chief operating officer of Breakthrough. Shippers are facing many challenges today. There is the world’s political situation for one. Another is inflation and the need to diversify. Our guest today offers some insights into the challenges of shippers and what they can be doing to mitigate their risks.

    The air cargo sector was one of the supply chain transport modes that was the most disturbed by the pandemic. While most of that chaotic period is hopefully behind us, the air freight market continues to see a turbulent path forward. We report on some of the latest numbers and what they mean for the remainder of the year.

    A recent survey found that most companies remain committed to investing in their environmental sustainability goals, despite economic challenges like inflation and a potential recession in 2023. We look deeper into the research to find out what business leaders are thinking and whether current economic conditions will affect their future commitments to sustainability.

    DC Velocity's sister publication CSCMP's Supply Chain Quarterly  offers a podcast series called Supply Chain in the Fast Lane.  It is co-produced with the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals. The third season of eight episodes has fully launched  and focuses on attracting and retaining labor in our supply chains.  Go to your favorite podcast platform to subscribe.


    Articles and resources mentioned in this episode:

    Podcast is sponsored by:  TGW

    Other links

    Guest: Brett Williams, retired Air Force Major General and head of U.S. Cyber command, on cybersecurity; Demand for shipping remains sluggish; Retailers discover new tech at the National Retail Federation show

    Guest: Brett Williams, retired Air Force Major General and head of U.S. Cyber command, on cybersecurity; Demand for shipping remains sluggish; Retailers discover new tech at the National Retail Federation show

    Our guest on this week's episode is Brett Williams, a retired Major General from the United States Air Force and one of the nation's leading consultants and experts on cybersecurity. Williams is the former director of operations at the United States Cyber Command, where he led a team of 400 people responsible for the global operations and protection of all Department Of Defense computer networks. After retiring from a 33-year military career, General Williams co-founded a business called IronNet Security. He discusses the threats our computer systems face, why supply chains are critical to our national defense, and what supply chain managers can do to better safeguard their data.

    A slowing economy continues to affect the trucking sector. We’ve seen falling demand for services since the end of last year, driven by inflation, concerns of a recession, and a general sense of uncertainty in the economy. An industry report out this week shows that carriers will continue to compete for limited demand–at least through the first quarter.

    The latest tech was on display this week at the National Retail Federation show in New York. We'll tell you about some of the newest technology designed for retail fulfillment and in-store sales.

    DC Velocity's sister publication CSCMP's Supply Chain Quarterly  offers a podcast series called Supply Chain in the Fast Lane.  It is co-produced with the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals. The third season of eight episodes has fully launched  and focuses on attracting and retaining labor in our supply chains.  Go to your favorite podcast platform to subscribe.


    Articles and resources mentioned in this episode:

    Podcast is sponsored by:  Beckoff

    Other links

    Advanced Air Mobility with Vertical Aerospace

    Advanced Air Mobility with Vertical Aerospace
    On this episode of Aerospace Unplugged, we talk with Michael Cervenka, the President of Vertical Aerospace, a company out of the United Kingdom that has its sights set on revolutionizing the way we travel through the air. Vertical wants to help decarbonize air travel by launching the world's first flying taxis by 2024, and a first flight test is not far away. Michael’s background lies in aerospace engineering focusing on engine and turbine design before moving into the role of Future Business Propositions with Rolls Royce. Now he works with Vertical to revolutionize how people fly.

    Connecting Digitalization and Machine Safety with Tony Catterson of Pilz New Zealand

    Connecting Digitalization and Machine Safety with Tony Catterson of Pilz New Zealand

    In this podcast, Tony Catterson, Manager, Pilz New Zealand, tells ARC’s Bob Gill why he is so excited about the digitalization opportunities in the world of machine safety. And from his several decades of experience in the sector, Tony gives his take on the current level of machine safety awareness across different industries and offers three key lessons for manufacturers looking to ensure a safe workplace.

    Guest: Thomas Evans of Honeywell on automating for small businesses; How 5G will influence IoT adoption; Consumer pandemic shopping habits will continue

    Guest: Thomas Evans of Honeywell on automating for small businesses; How 5G will influence IoT adoption; Consumer pandemic shopping habits will continue

    In this episode, Dr. Thomas Evans, chief robotics technology officer at Honeywell, discusses how automation can help small to medium-sized distributors compete with the big guys on the block.

    5G cell technology is rolling out across the nation, but it will take a while for the infrastructure to be  in fully in place to make an impact. How will it eventually affect the growth of devices using Internet of Things technology?

    During the pandemic, consumers stopped shopping in person and turned to online shopping for the goods they needed. Now that the nation is re-emerging, it appears those shopping habits are here to stay.


    Articles and resources mentioned in this episode:

    Podcast sponsored byAptean

    Other links

    Process Optimization For a Volatile Energy Market

    Process Optimization For a Volatile Energy Market

    The ability for APC software to reduce process variability, product give away and optimize against process constraints is well understood. Often this optimization has also been accomplished in silos from other production stakeholders. Today and especially in the volatile energy future, in the downstream refining and chemicals industry, the benefits of steady operation will be managed in real-time against the gap existing between “plan versus actual”, While production optimization is not new, the ability to dynamically coordinate multiple process units in closed loop and automatically adjusting APCs is a market driver. Production optimization software is easily deployed and maintained by APC engineers and is often a logical extension of an engineer’s workload. 

    In this Episode ARC Analyst Peter Reynolds speaks with Jaideep Bhattacharya & Christophe Romatier of Honeywell to discuss Process Optimization For a Volatile Energy Market.

    Quantum 21 : c'est la QCB !

    Quantum 21 : c'est la QCB !


     La QCB du mercredi 4 novembre aura bien lieu, sous forme de webinar, de 9h à 18h30, et sera enregistrée en plateau TV sans audience chez Bpifrance. Il y aura notamment une introduction avec Cédric O, puis Bruno Sportisse d’Inria, puis une intervention de John Martinis (ex Google, maintenant chez SQC en Australie). De nombreux panels aussi couvrant plein d’aspects du calcul quantique, hardware, software, usages, puis sur l’écosystème français. Les inscriptions sont gratuites, profitez-en !

    https://evenements.bpifrance.fr/qcb-quantum-computing-business

     

    Les pérégrinations d'Olivier dans le Quantique : 

     

    Grenoble les 14, 15 et 16 octobre.

    ·      Tristan Meunier et son laboratoire de Néel où il teste les qubits silicium (et germanium) produits par le CEA-Leti. 

    ·       Nicolas Roch de l’Institut Néel qui fait des recherches sur des qubits supraconducteurs.

    ·       Thierry Chanelière, également de l’Institut Néel qui utilise des terres rares pour le traitement de la lumière.

    ·       Eric Gaussier et Medhi Mallah du LIG (Laboratoire d’Informatique de Grenoble) et du MIAI, le 3IA de Grenoble. Ils investissent dans la recherche et l’enseignement sur la branche logicielle de l’informatique quantique.

    ·       Alexia Auffèves et son équipe pour plancher sur le lien entre la scalabilité du calcul quantique et ses aspects énergétiques. Vous pourrez revoir la keynote de la conférence sur le calcul quantique organisée par le pôle de compétitivité Minalogic le 16 octobre. 

    https://www.minalogic.com/evenements/quantum-computing/   

     

    LKB le 28 octobre

    Le Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, l’un des deux gros laboratoires dans les technologies quantique de l’ENS Paris (avec le LPENS). Rencontre avec une belle brochette de chercheurs de haut vol qui travaillent en physique fondamentale.

    ·       Nicolas Treps : photonique en variables continues utile à la fois pour les télécommunications quantiques et pour le calcul quantique. 

    ·       Valentina Parigi : qui a obtenu en 2018 un ERC Consolidator Grant » (2M€) pour son projet COQCOoN qui concerne aussi la structure complexe et quantique des systèmes physiques, notamment à base de variables continues. 

    https://www.ens.psl.eu/actualites/valentina-parigi   

    ·       Serge Reynaud : qui planche depuis longtemps sur un phénomène quantique rarement évoqué: les fluctuations quantiques du vide. 

    ·       Tom Darras et Felix Hoffet : deux doctorants qui travaillent sur des répéteurs quantiques, importants pour les télécommunications quantiques. Publication récente de leurs travaux : 

    https://phys.org/news/2020-10-world-entanglement-storage-milestone-alliance.html

    ·       Sylvain Gigan : qui est aussi chief scientist de la startup LightOn. 

    ·       Raphael Lopes : qui, au Collège de France, bosse sur des qubits à base d’atomes froids de dysprosium.
    http://www.lkb.upmc.fr/boseeinsteincondensates/359-2/ultracold-dysprosium/

     

    Honeywell passe à 10 qubits en ions piégés après 6 en juin et 4 en mars. 

    https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/honeywell-releases-next-generation-of-quantum-computer-301163034.html  

     

    Pasqal annonce un partenariat avec la startup autrichienne ParityQC pour développer le premier ordinateur quantique parallélisable. 

    https://pasqal.io/2020/10/27/parityqc-and-pasqal-partner-to-build-the-first-fully-parallelizable-quantum-computer/  

    Ils annoncent aussi atteindre bientôt un record de 200 qubits avec leur système à base d’atomes froids de rubidium. Bientôt = fin d’année/début 2021. Cela sera une étape très importante dans le calcul quantique et à l’échelle mondiale.

    https://pasqal.io/2020/10/26/1329/  

     

    Toshiba se lance dans la course de la QKD. Ils fournissent notamment le NIST aux USA pour des déploiements expérimentaux.

    https://thequantumdaily.com/2020/10/19/toshiba-launches-systems-aimed-at-20-billion-quantum-key-distribution-market/  

     

     

    Morning Bell 3 November

    Morning Bell 3 November

    The Australian share market is set to have a sluggish lift of 0.1%. Just 1 day out from the U.S. election, investors bought the dip, pushing up key U.S. indices such as the S&P500, Dow Jones, and Nasdaq rising 1.2%, 1.6%, and 0.4% respectively.

    In commodities, Oil gained 3.7% rising to US$37.12, while gold commenced US$1,896.

    What to watch today:
     -         The RBA meets, with rates expected to be cut to 0.1%
     -         Additionally, the RBA is set to announce more bond buying, with at least $5 billion a month in order to get more money in the economy.

    Local trading ideas:
     -         UBS increased CSR’s (ASX:CSR) buy rating and price target to $5.19
     -         ResMed (ASX:RMD) was yesterday upgraded by Credit Suisse, Macquarie, UBS, and Wilsons. Credit Suisse is the most bullish with a target of $31
     -         UBS reiterated Westpac (ASX:WBC) as a buy with a $20.50 price target, after the bank announced what some would call a multi-year turnaround report card.
     -         Lastly, Trading Central’s technical analysis suggests that Amaysim (AYS), Ansell (ANN) and Bellevue Gold (BGL) are all showing bullish signals

    Quantum 20 : Actualité quantique + l'ordinateur quantique le plus puissant du monde

    Quantum 20 : Actualité quantique + l'ordinateur quantique le plus puissant du monde

    Ce vingtième épisode de Quantum est très chargé par une très belle actualité quantique. 
    En voici le sommaire : 

    Evénements passés : 

    ·       Dernier podcast Decode Quantum avec Philippe Duluc et Cyril Allouche d’Atos. 

    https://www.spreaker.com/user/decodemedia/decode-quantum-duluc-allouche


    ·       Le Women in Quantum Summit avec une intervention d’Elvira Shishenina.

    https://onequantum.org/wiq-videos/?fbclid=IwAR34_1RDj1A64X2Yz1wHzr_R7VZhNQTiWQxMP9d1NCFT-6cJQoMi5_gXevo


    ·       Intervention d'Olivier Ezratty lors de la soirée pour les alumnis de CentraleSupelec sur Les enjeux de l’informatique quantique 

    https://association.centralesupelec-alumni.com/article/les-enjeux-de-l-informatique-quantique/30/09/2020/2946


     

    Quelques événements à venir :


    - 13/10/2020 : Relance du Lab Quantique avec une séance sur les écosystèmes quantiques.  Avec Irfan Siddiqi, Micjel Kurek  et une belle étude quantitative sur les brevets dans les technologies quantiques)

    https://www.meetup.com/fr-FR/Paris-Quantum-Computing-Technologies/events/273585577

    - 16/10/2020 : Conférence Minalogic (en "Phygital") à Grenoble avec Olivier Ezratty qui donne une keynote le matin sur l’ingénierie quantique avec Alexia Auffèves. Mise en bouche sur le calcul quantique couvrant à la fois la dimension matérielle et logicielle. Interventions de chercheurs et aussi d’entreprises (Atos, IBM, Total) et startups (Qubit Pharma, Absolut Systems). 

    https://www.minalogic.com/evenements/quantum-computing/


    - 20/10/2020 : L’événement Quantum Computing in Paris Saclay, à Versailles. Avec les interventions de Alice&Bob, Quantfi, Qubit Pharma, Pasqal, Veriqloud,CryoConcept et Quandela. Plus IBM, Airbus, Quantonation. 

    https://www.eventbrite.fr/e/billets-quantum-computing-in-paris-saclay-la-french-tech-paris-saclay-llq-119856521081

    - 30/10/2020 : Edition spéciale quantique et IA des Rencontres de l’intelligence économique de Paris Saclay, sur le site NanoInnov de Palaiseau : enjeux géopolitiques de l’IA et des technologies quantiques. Intervention de Pascale Senellart, Alain Juillet, Etienne Klein et Alexei Grinbaum.

    https://systematic-paris-region.org/evenement/les-rencontres-intelligence-economique-de-paris-saclay-quantique-2-0-et-ia-des-technologies-cles-pour-la-souverainete-numerique/


    Actualité de la  quinzaine : 

    Ces derniers jours ont été incroyablement riches en annonces. On va essayer de les interpréter et de les mettre en perspective.


    News #1 : D-Wave
    annonce la mise en production dans le cloud de leur nouveau calculateur quantique à recuit quantique de 5000 qubits. 

    https://www.dwavesys.com/press-releases/d-wave-announces-general-availability-first-quantum-computer-built-business


    News #2
    : La startup australienne SQC de Michelle Simmons recrute John Martinis, ex-Google.

    https://sqc.com.au/2020/09/30/googles-former-top-quantum-scientist-professor-john-martinis-has-joined-the-sqc-team/


    News #3 : IonQ
    annonce l’ordinateur quantique le plus puissant du monde.

    https://ionq.com/news/october-01-2020-most-powerful-quantum-computer

     

    News #4 : Honeywell annonce le doublement la puissance de ses qubits en passant d'un volume quantique de 64 à 128.

    https://www.honeywell.com/en-us/newsroom/news/2020/09/achieving-quantum-volume-128-on-the-honeywell-quantum-computer 


    News #5
    : en France, Quandela lance une nouvelle génération de générateur de photons uniques.

    https://twitter.com/Quandela_SAS/status/1311308106362687495

    News #6 : CryoConcept  acquis par Air Liquide.

    https://fr.media.airliquide.com/actualites/air-liquide-renforce-son-expertise-en-cryogenie-extreme-avec-une-prise-de-participation-majoritaire-dans-la-societe-cryoconcept-148f-1ba6d.html

    Networking Is Not a Bad Word - Bunny Ellerin, CEO and Co-founder, NYC Health Business Leaders

    Networking Is Not a  Bad Word - Bunny Ellerin, CEO and Co-founder, NYC Health Business Leaders
    Even though Bunny Ellerin has built a career around bringing people and organizations together -- in fact she's known as "the most connected person in healthcare" -- she still gets apprehensive walking into a room full of business leaders she may not know. While acknowledging that networking is scary for many people, and seen as too transactional for others, she wants her students at Columbia Business School and people in healthcare professions to understand that it's not just about handing out business cards at events. Reaching out with an article recommendation or proactively connecting people who you think would benefit from knowing each other is also "networking". Check out this episode of Raise the Line to find out how, as co-founder and CEO of New York City Health Business Leaders, Ellerin has used this approach to spur innovation in healthcare and help build a thriving digital health scene in New York.

    Quantum 15 : l'actu quantique (très fournie)

    Quantum 15 : l'actu quantique (très fournie)

    Evénements

     Conférence QT Digital Week UK qui durait plusieurs jours la semaine dernière. 

    https://www.quantumtechdigital.co.uk/

     

    Decode Quantum avec Elham Kashefi

    https://www.frenchweb.fr/decode-quantum-rencontre-avec-elham-kashefi-directrice-de-recherche-au-cnrs/401893

     

    IA masterclass sur le hardware de l’IA pour le Hub France IA. 

    https://app.livestorm.co/hub-france-ia/olivier-ezratty-meetup-digital/live?s=9de3366e-977b-4f3f-acf7-a39d7fc6ec7b#/chat

    Fintech Community
    12h00-13h00 : Table Ronde « Informatique quantique : nouvel horizon de la finance »
    Modératrice : Fanny Bouton, Startup Development Manager France, OVH Cloud

    • Paul Hiriart, CEO-Co-founder, Quantfi
    • Julien Miquel, Finance Industry Specialist, Google
    • George Uzbelger, AI / Advanced Analytics Solution & Quantum Computing Leader, IBM
    • Philippe Duluc, Chief technology Officer, Atos
    • Jean-Gabriel Boinot, Associate, Quantonation

    https://finance-innovation.org/fintechcommunity/

     

    Actualité scientifique

     

    Honeywell délivre les 6 qubits qu’il avait annoncés en mars dernier après en avoir produit 4, avec des ions piégés. Présentent cela comme l’ordinateur quantique le plus puissant ou le plus rapide du monde. C’est un peu une vue de l’esprit avec juste 6 qubits. Cela provient de l’usage de l’indicateur du volume quantique d’IBM qui associe nombre de qubits et profondeur de calcul. Seulement, on peut émuler 6 qubits parfaits sur un smartphone, donc côté puissance, il y a encore du chemin à parcourir. Par contre, si Honeywell arrive comme ils l’indiquent à continuer d’augmenter le nombre de qubits, cela deviendra intéressant.

    https://www.oezratty.net/wordpress/2020/honeywell-ordinateur-quantique/

     

    Juste avant, IonQ, également dans les qubits à ions piégés, faisait une levée de fonds de $8M portant le total à $84M. On sent le cash de secours. Avec notamment Lockheed Martin dans le tour. Et pour rassurer les investisseurs, ils faisaient rentrer de nouvelles personnalités dans leur advisory board, dont le prix Nobel David Wineland du NIST.

    https://www.quantaneo.com/IonQ-Secures-New-Funding-and-Advisory-Board-Members-to-Meet-Growing-Quantum-Computing-Industry-Demand_a548.html

     

    Universal Quantum (UK) lève £3,6M. Technologie d’ions piégés contrôlables par micro-ondes et sans lasers pour activer les portes quantiques.

    https://thequantumdaily.com/2020/06/15/universal-quantum-emerges-from-stealth-with-3-6-million-seed-funding-announcement/

     

    Quantum Motion (UK) qui est dans les qubits silicium levait £8M.

    https://www.quantaneo.com/Quantum-Motion-raises-8m-in-oversubscribed-series-A-fundraising_a523.html

     

    Quantonation rentre au capital de Qubit Pharma.

    https://medium.com/quantonation/qubit-pharmaceuticals-closes-a-pre-seed-round-with-quantonation-c85593e76c4e

     

    Partenariat entre Atos et la startup IQM en Finlande. Ils fournissent surtout un émulateur classique, l’aQLM. Mais semblent s’intéresser aux qubits supraconducteurs du finlandais pour les utiliser comme accélérateurs quantiques.

    https://atos.net/en/2020/press-release/general-press-releases_2020_06_18/atos-csc-and-iqm-partner-to-accelerate-the-commercialization-of-european-quantum-technologies

     

    Quantum Machines (Israel) lançait QUA, un langage de programmation quantique censé être universel. A l’origine, cette startup travaille sur les dispositifs de contrôle de qubits supraconducteurs. Ca sent le repositionnement.

    https://www.prnewswire.com/il/news-releases/quantum-machines-announces-qua-as-first-standard-universal-language-for-quantum-computers-301079334.html

     

    Au même moment, l’ETH Zurich lançait Silq, un autre langage de programmation quantique « de haut niveau ». Il permet de créer du code plus compact. Le nombre de langages e programmation quantique se compte en dizaines. De quoi en perdre son latin.

    https://techcrunch.com/2020/06/15/silq-is-a-new-high-level-programming-language-for-quantum-computers

     

    Dans le cadre de leur plan de relance technologique de 50Md€, le gouvernement allemand a annoncé une rallonge de 2Md€ pour leur plan quantique. Ils avaient alloué 659M€ en septembre 2018. Les USA ont aussi ajouté une rallonge de $800M (sur deux ans) au plan de $1,25B lancé en décembre 2018. Les anglais ont aussi lancés la V2 de leur plan et lancé la construction d’un centre de calcul quantique. Ces pays ont donc tous lancé la V2 de leur plan quantique. Pendant ce temps, la France met la touche finale à la V1 de son plan. Le processus administratif de finalisation du plan est lourd. Le covid l’a aussi retardé, mais pas pour les allemands. On espère que le gouvernement ne va pas tarder à annoncer ce plan.

    https://thequantumdaily.com/2020/06/15/qubit-alles-germany-invest-2-billion-euros-in-quantum-technology-build-two-quantum-computers/

     

    Bonne nouvelle côté enseignement supérieur, l'INSA de Lyon ouvrira à la rentrée deux modules électifs destinés aux étudiants en cinquième année pour un total de 64h de cours - 32h dédiées à la théorie et 32h dédiées à la programmation. Si vous êtes une université ou grande écoleet lancez un cursus sur le quantique, faites-le nous savoir.

    Quantum 8 : L'actu quantique et un peu de Covid-19

    Quantum 8 : L'actu quantique et un peu de Covid-19

    Honeywell rejoint la course au Quantique. Qu'en est-il vraiment ?
     - https://www.futura-sciences.com/tech/actualites/informatique-honeywell-annonce-percee-quantique-majeure-79871/
    - https://www.oezratty.net/wordpress/2020/honeywell-ordinateur-quantique/
     
    Evénements
    ·       Retour sur le panel QFDN avec Pascale Senellart, Alexia Auffeves et Elham Kashefi  
    - https://youtu.be/J4raJ1BdKaE
    ·       On lance un podcast DECODE Quantum avec Frenchweb. 1er épisode avec Pascale Senellart
    - https://www.spreaker.com/user/decodemedia/decode-quantum-pascale-senellar
    ·       Crypto quantum : un event de la BPI et Quantonation avec Emmanuel Chiva de l'AID en ouverture.
    ·       Analyse de l'étude McKinsey  et son trillion de dollar du quantique 
    - https://www.usine-digitale.fr/editorial/l-informatique-quantique-pesera-1000-milliards-de-dollars-en-2035-selon-mckinsey.N937863

    Quantique et coronavirus.
    ·       Impossible de ne pas coller à l’actualité. Quel est rôle de la science ?

    How one company is using Space Camp to foster STEM careers - Episode 215

    How one company is using Space Camp to foster STEM careers - Episode 215

    When you think of STEM, do you automatically think of coding? We talked with Marti Skold-Jordan from Honeywell about how the company is using a week-long space camp experience to introduce kids to all kinds of STEM careers in an exciting, hands-on way.

    Thanks so much to this week's sponsor, KiwiCo! Go to KiwiCo.com/parenting and get your first month FREE on select crates.

    You can go to the Parenting Bytes website for all of the links we talk about, plus an interactive transcript of the entire episode.

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