Who keeps the pet in a divorce: How is custody decided... and what about maintenance?
I've had my fair share of experience working on disputes involving pets, says family lawyer Kirsten Tomlinson, pictured, of Brabners Personal.
Essex's 'monster' roundabout once named the most confusing in Britain
It has 48 traffic lights - which is a UK record for a roundabout!
Business class vs economy on the world's best airline: Inside Qatar Airways' acclaimed £3,000 Qsuite from Heathrow to Doha, then returning in the back of the plane (with a major surprise in store)
Qatar Airways was named World's Best Airline in the 'Oscars of Aviation' for an unprecedented eighth time. MailOnline Travel Editor Ted Thornhill finds out if the airline lives up to the hype...
Critics Choice Awards 2025: Best dressed stars on the red carpet
Hollywood brought their fashion A-game to the 30th Annual Critics Choice Awards on Friday at Barker Hanger in Santa Monica, California.
This nepo baby joined his Hollywood star parents at the 2025 Critics Choice Awards... can you guess who he is?
This nepo baby joined his Hollywood superstar parents at the 2025 Critics Choice Awards on Friday.
The quaint Essex woods with cafe overlooking pretty pond that's soon to be filled with bluebells
It truly is a magical walk
The vital lesson every parent must learn from the tragic death of little baby Olivia, found dead in the back of her father's car in Earlwood on a roasting hot Sydney day
Not only for her parents Etienne Ancelet and Kim Visconti's devastating loss, but also for the lifetime of judgment ahead of them.
Fashion influencer Laleska Alexandre dies suddenly aged 28 as cause of death is revealed
Family and friends have shared moving tributes online, while fans have posted their condolences on photos across her popular social media accounts.
Burlesque dancer aims to 'empower' all with her professional Valentines Day show
A burlesque dancer who runs a popular dance school is producing her first professional show with glitz, glamour and humour on Valentines Day.
Ryan Reynolds skips Critics Choice Awards despite WINNING as he and Blake Lively vanish from public life amid Justin Baldoni scandal
Ryan Reynolds skipped the Critics Choice Awards amid his and wife Blake Lively's ugly legal battle with Justin Baldoni despite being among the night's big winners.
Through gritted teeth, humiliated Ed Miliband finally backs a third runway for Heathrow as he backtracks on net-zero pledges and says he does 'support what the Government is doing'
The Climate Secretary was forced to eat humble pie as he backtracked on his net-zero pledges, saying he does 'support what the Government is doing' on Heathrow.
American travellers reveal the surprising items they love to buy in the UK to take home to the USA
Americans aren't short on shops. But it turns out that there are gaps in the USA retail inventory - British treats unavailable stateside that American travellers crave on trips to the UK.
Wes Streeting accuses NHS bosses of being too keen on hiring migrant doctors amid record number of foreign-trained medics coming to the UK - as he vows to boost 'home-grown talent'
Wes Streeting pledged to boost 'home-grown' talent after new numbers revealed that doctors are coming from abroad in record numbers.
Lucky Essex residents win more than £1.4m in this month's Premium Bonds draw
The winners of the latest Premium Bonds prize draw have been announced - with 124 lucky winners in Essex
Lucky Essex residents win more than £1.4m in this month's Premium Bonds draw
The winners of the latest Premium Bonds prize draw have been announced - with 124 lucky winners in Essex
DOGE geek with Treasury payment system access now quits amid racist tweet claims
We did Nazi see that coming
Updated Marko Elez, a former SpaceX, Starlink, and X engineer who was granted deep access to a critical US Treasury payment system by the Trump-blessed Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), has quit that team after he was linked to a racist Twitter account.…
Quantum Teleportation Used To Distribute a Calculation
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: In today's issue of Nature, a team at Oxford University describes using quantum teleportation to link two pieces of quantum hardware that were located about 2 meters apart, meaning they could easily have been in different rooms entirely. Once linked, the two pieces of hardware could be treated as a single quantum computer, allowing simple algorithms to be performed that involved operations on both sides of the 2-meter gap. [...] The Oxford team was simply interested in a proof-of-concept, and so used an extremely simplified system. Each end of the 2-meter gap had a single trap holding two ions, one strontium and one calcium. The two atoms could be entangled with each other, getting them to operate as a single unit.
The calcium ion served as a local memory and was used in computations, while the strontium ion served as one of the two ends of the quantum network. An optical cable between the two ion traps allowed photons to entangle the two strontium ions, getting the whole system to operate as a single unit. The key thing about the entanglement processes used here is that a failure to entangle left the system in its original state, meaning that the researchers could simply keep trying until the qubits were entangled. The entanglement event would also lead to a photon that could be measured, allowing the team to know when success had been achieved (this sort of entanglement with a success signal is termed "heralded" by those in the field).
The researchers showed that this setup allowed them to teleport with a specific gate operation (controlled-Z), which can serve as the basis for any other two-qubit gate operation -- any operation you might want to do can be done by using a specific combination of these gates. After performing multiple rounds of these gates, the team found that the typical fidelity was in the area of 70 percent. But they also found that errors typically had nothing to do with the teleportation process and were the product of local operations at one of the two ends of the network. They suspect that using commercial hardware, which has far lower error rates, would improve things dramatically. Finally, they performed a version of Grover's algorithm, which can, with a single query, identify a single item from an arbitrarily large unordered list. The "arbitrary" aspect is set by the number of available qubits; in this case, having only two qubits, the list maxed out at four items. Still, it worked, again with a fidelity of about 70 percent.
While the work was done with trapped ions, almost every type of qubit in development can be controlled with photons, so the general approach is hardware-agnostic. And, given the sophistication of our optical hardware, it should be possible to link multiple chips at various distances, all using hardware that doesn't require the best vacuum or the lowest temperatures we can generate. That said, the error rate of the teleportation steps may still be a problem, even if it was lower than the basic hardware rate in these experiments. The fidelity there was 97 percent, which is lower than the hardware error rates of most qubits and high enough that we couldn't execute too many of these before the probability of errors gets unacceptably high.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Primark's 'beautiful' sets of Valentine's Day themed underwear which they say is 'magnifique'
The sets are on sale now in all Primark stores
Prince documentary featuring abuse allegations by ex scrapped by Netflix amid new deal with late star's estate
Netflix has decided to scrap a documentary about Prince, more than five years in the making, after working out a new deal with the late superstar's estate to do new film.
Essex woman diagnosed with cancer 3 times after her first symptom was dismissed
Katherine, from Great Dunmow, since went on to work for the ambulance service after being inspired by paramedics who helped her.