Search a title or topic

Over 20 million podcasts, powered by 

Player FM logo

Error Correction Podcasts

show episodes
 
Artwork

1
Increments

Ben Chugg and Vaden Masrani

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Monthly
 
Vaden Masrani, a senior research scientist in machine learning, and Ben Chugg, a PhD student in statistics, get into trouble arguing about everything except machine learning and statistics. Coherence is somewhere on the horizon. Bribes, suggestions, love-mail and hate-mail all welcome at [email protected].
  continue reading
 
Physics World Weekly offers a unique insight into the latest news, breakthroughs and innovations from the global scientific community. Our award-winning journalists reveal what has captured their imaginations about the stories in the news this week, which might span anything from quantum physics and astronomy through to materials science, environmental research and policy, and biomedical science and technology. Find out more about the stories in this podcast by visiting the Physics World web ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
SNippets

Sankara nethralaya

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Monthly
 
A Sankara Nethralaya initiative for ophthalmologists,optometrists and allied eye health professionals in training. We will be covering new and interesting topics every week.
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Theoretical Physics Schools (ASC)

The Arnold Sommerfeld Center for Theoretical Physics (ASC)

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Daily+
 
Every year the Arnold Sommerfeld Center (ASC) for Theoretical Physics at the LMU in Munich organizes a school for PhD students. It covers topics which are of current interest in theoretical physics and range from more applied fields like condensed matter physics to rather mathematical fields like string theory. Announcements of upcoming schools can be found on the ASC schools webpage and a list of past schools can be found in the archive of the ASC schools.
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Indulgently Minimal

Indulgently Minimal

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Monthly+
 
Indulgently Minimal is wondering if there is a better way to navigate our current world of work and play in an environment saturated with advertising, social media, and other nudges to consume. Join us as we explore these questions; discussing tech, lifestyle, and philosophy; as we search for a balance between buying new toys and indulging in our passions, as well as reducing our wasteful behaviours and removing from our lifestyle the things that don't make us happy or contribute to healthy ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Surgery 101

Surgery 101 Team

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Monthly+
 
Welcome to Surgery 101, a series of podcasts produced with the help of the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada. The podcasts are intended to serve as brief introductions or reviews of surgical topics for medical students. We've aimed to cover a single topic in between 10-20 minutes so that you can quickly get a good idea of the basic concepts involved. Every episode is divided into chapters and concludes with several key points to summarize the topic. We are always keen to receive your ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
​​Patently Strategic - Patent Strategy for Startups

Aurora Patent Consulting | Ashley Sloat, Ph.D.

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Monthly
 
A patent focused podcast for inventors, founders, and IP professionals, covering the finer points, sharp edges, and nuances of startup patent strategy. Each monthly episode will feature a round-table style discussion amongst experts in the field of patenting. Patently Strategic is brought to you by Aurora Consulting, a patent strategy boutique that specializes in working with early stage life science, medical​ device, digital health, and software companies to develop valuable patent portfoli ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Quantum Well

Horizon Quantum Computing

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Daily+
 
What are the barriers we will need to overcome to make quantum computing relevant for the real-world problem? Are they problems inherent in scaling physical systems to large numbers of well-controlled qubits? The need for quantum communications networks to allow modular and distributed systems? The limitations of existing programming languages or the difficulty of constructing new quantum algorithms? Probably, all of these. To explore these barriers and how they are being addressed, Horizon ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Creating the Perfect Company

Multi-View Incorporated

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Monthly+
 
This weekly (Fridays) series of messages is based on Multi-View Incorporated’s work with over 1,300 organizations, extracting 989 data-elements with 922 cross-calculations over 27 years on a monthly basis. And then “systematizing” the operational “Best-Known Success Patterns” of the 90th percentile. Our intent is to get beyond the “brag and the boast,” and simply share insights from our experience, without manipulation or coercion to sell anything except helpful ideas. MVI has helped create ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
AuthenTeach - An ELT Podcast

AuthenTeach - An ELT Podcast

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Monthly
 
This podcast is aimed towards ELT professionals who are interested in professional growth through discussion, collaboration, and exploration of important topics in our field. We will be discussing topics together, bringing on special guests to deepen the perspective, and asking some tough questions. To learn more about us and this podcast please visit our Instagram @authenteachpodcast and drop us a message! Thanks so much for spending some of your time with us, we hope you tune in to the nex ...
  continue reading
 
This podcast clears the air about what disruption is, what it takes to create a successful brand in the 21st-century, and we take a deep dive into topics like growth hacking and marketing. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/kia-mcclain/support
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Scrood

Ben Scrood & Elly Stone

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Monthly
 
Scrood is a satirical, light and easy Political Humor & Comedy information and mini documentary podcast about gett'n SCROOD by the system--facts & laughs covering as much as we can for free. Before the election, Scrood produced satirical content aimed at exposing corruption in politics, the supreme court and BIG, multinational business. Youtube, X, Pinterest and some podcast platforms throttled our show, making it unavailable to many. After our Holiday break, we will return to our society an ...
  continue reading
 
1. Conduct a Hazard Analysis You should create a list of hazards that includes information for all the dishes you serve in your restaurant. Hazards to food safety include biological, physical or chemical agents that, if not controlled, are most likely to lead to illness or injury. You should include all ingredients as well as information on how the food is stored, how it was distributed and how it was prepared. In order for the hazard analysis to be thorough, it’s critical to understand the ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Best's Insurance Law Podcast

Best's Recommended Insurance Attorneys & Adjusters

icon
Unsubscribe
icon
icon
Unsubscribe
icon
Monthly
 
Best’s Insurance Law Podcast series examines key topics in the insurance industry from an attorney’s point of view. Featured panelists are top lawyers from firms profiled in Best's Insurance Professional Resources, a highly selective online service showcasing only firms recommended by their clients for outstanding service to the insurance industry. Published by AM Best, Best's Insurance Professional Resources is a claims industry resource that features qualified legal counsel, independent in ...
  continue reading
 
Loading …
show series
 
In this rigorous engineering deep-dive from January 2, 2026, the Qubit Value podcast confronts the single greatest barrier to useful quantum computing: noise. The episode dismantles the hope that better hardware alone will suffice, explaining why "Quantum Error Correction" is an existential requirement where errors currently compound exponentially.…
  continue reading
 
This is a clip from class #10 of Ustaadh Moosaa Richardson's classes on Usool as-Sunnah (Foundations of the Sunnah in Creed) by al-Imaam al-Humaydee (may Allah have Mercy on him). A strange new error has appeared, that when one prays sitting, he intentionally does not lean forward for rukoo' or sujood, but rather he only nods with his head for thos…
  continue reading
 
In this breaking news episode from January 9, 2026, the Qubit Value podcast analyzes the blockbuster $550 million acquisition of Quantum Circuits Inc. (QCI) by D-Wave, a move that signals the end of the "playground era" for quantum computing. The hosts dissect D-Wave's strategic pivot from being solely an annealing specialist to a dual-platform pow…
  continue reading
 
This episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast features Alex May, whose research explores the intersection of quantum gravity and quantum information theory. Based at Canada’s Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, May explains how ideas being developed in the burgeoning field of quantum information theory could help solve one of the most e…
  continue reading
 
In this episode from January 7, 2026, the Qubit Value podcast focuses on the accelerating commercialization of quantum technology, moving from theoretical potential to tangible economic impact. The hosts discuss the rapidly growing quantum ecosystem, noting that the market could surge from $4 billion today to $72 billion by 2035. A key theme is the…
  continue reading
 
By the mid-19th century, improvements in illumination and optics transformed endoscopy from a theoretical idea into a practical clinical tool, culminating in Antoine Jean Desormeaux's work in Paris in 1853. Building on Bozzini's Lichtleiter and frustrated by diagnostic limits of palpation, Desormeaux replaced candlelight with a brighter, controllab…
  continue reading
 
How do electrons behave when they’re confined to a single layer, and why do entirely new laws of physics emerge when dimensions shrink? Papers discussed in this episode: Experimental observation of the quantum Hall effect and Berry's phase in graphene: https://www.nature.com/articles/nature04235 Tunable Fractional Quantum Hall Phases in Bilayer Gra…
  continue reading
 
In this commercially focused episode from January 5, 2026, the Qubit Value podcast explores the rapidly growing economic ecosystem surrounding quantum computing, moving beyond the "science fiction" phase to real revenue generation. The hosts discuss projections that the market could explode from $4 billion today to $72 billion by 2035, driven large…
  continue reading
 
[970] Part 1 of 2. An English podcast about simple habits you can introduce in your life, to be in top condition for learning English all year long. This is all backed up by scientific research into how our brains work, how we learn language, and how little changes in our behaviour can help us perform better and achieve more in the time we are give…
  continue reading
 
In this episode from January 3, 2026, the Qubit Value podcast explores the paradigm shift from binary qubits to "qudits," multidimensional quantum units that harness the naturally occurring higher energy levels in hardware like trapped ions and superconducting transmons. The hosts explain that while qudits theoretically offer massive efficiency gai…
  continue reading
 
In this premiere of Season 4, the Qubit Value podcast focuses on the life sciences sector, providing a candid engineering assessment of quantum computing's potential in drug discovery as of early 2026. The episode cuts through the excitement of "quantum-inspired" results to reveal significant technical hurdles: even with recent advances, the "Barre…
  continue reading
 
In 1806, physician Philipp Bozzini introduced the Lichtleiter, a candle-lit, mirror-lined instrument designed for direct visual inspection of internal organs—an idea far ahead of its time and initially met with skepticism. Though dismissed by many contemporaries, the device is now recognized as the first true endoscope, establishing Bozzini as the …
  continue reading
 
In this unvarnished year-end assessment from December 30, 2025, the Qubit Value podcast tackles the logistics and supply chain sector, dismantling the hype that quantum computers are ready to optimize global distribution networks. The hosts expose the critical "input problem," where the time required to encode massive supply chain datasets into qua…
  continue reading
 
[969] It's time for the annual World News Quiz with 20 questions about some of the curious news stories of 2025. Stephen Devincenzi from the SEND7 podcast is the quizmaster. Can you I improve on my poor performance from last year? Can you beat me? Take a trip through some news highlights from this year. Full transcript available as usual. ⛑️ Donate…
  continue reading
 
In this rigorous technical deep-dive from late December 2025, the Qubit Value podcast dismantles the "marketing fluff" surrounding quantum computing to expose the severe engineering constraints facing the financial industry. The hosts analyze why IBM's 1,000-qubit "Condor" chip is insufficient for real-world finance, noting that with current error …
  continue reading
 
In this candid 2025 year-end review, the Qubit Value podcast strips away the marketing hype to reveal the stark engineering realities facing quantum computing in the financial sector. The episode explores why, despite the buzz, not a single financial institution has deployed a quantum computer in production, highlighting the massive disparity betwe…
  continue reading
 
[968] The Collins Dictionary Words of the Year is a list of 10 words which capture the cultural zeitgeist - the spirit of the times that we are living in now. These are new words, picked by Collins, which reflect big issues that people have been talking about over the last 12 months. In this conversation, Amber, Paul & I discuss the impact of AI, t…
  continue reading
 
In this special holiday episode of the Qubit Value Podcast, the discussion centers on the "Traveling Santa Dilemma," a festive framing of the Traveling Salesman Problem (TSP) within the realm of quantum computing. The hosts explain that while pure quantum hardware is still in its "toy-making phase" for such complex optimizations—requiring nearly 10…
  continue reading
 
What makes high-temperature superconductors and “strange metals” some of the most perplexing systems in modern physics? In this episode, we speak with Dr. Subir Sachdev: Harvard physicist and one of the leading architects of today’s understanding of quantum matter. Sachdev explains why strange metals refuse to behave like ordinary conductors, how q…
  continue reading
 
This episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast features Pat Hanrahan, who studied nuclear engineering and biophysics before becoming a founding employee of Pixar Animation Studios. As well as winning three Academy Awards for his work on computer animation, Hanrahan won the Association for Computing Machinery’s A M Turing Award for his contributio…
  continue reading
 
Step into the high-performance era of quantum computing with this essential breakdown of Qiskit v2.2.3, where the core has been rewritten in Rust to double circuit construction speeds and boost transpilation efficiency. You will discover how the new native C++ API eliminates Python overhead for high-performance workflows and why the legacy execute(…
  continue reading
 
In close collaboration with Jeff Haffner, Chris Comeaux, and Teleios Studios Quality FIRST and ALWAYS! Stunning Economics follow. In a fast-moving crossover with Chris Comeaux and TCNTalks, Andrew, in his direct manner, affirm that Quality Comes from Within, separates Good from Bad Profits, and ties Margin to structure, intense training, and a comp…
  continue reading
 
[967] A conversation in the podcastle with my pals Amber & Paul. In this one we chat about Paul's ambitious international marathon plans (what is he running from exactly?) what Amber knows about the famous robbery of the Louvre this year, and Paul's dramatic "Jason Bourne" situation which he faced in West Africa recently. Listen to some spontaneous…
  continue reading
 
Unlock the future of quantum development with this deep dive into the transformative December 2025 Qiskit update, a release that fundamentally changes how you write and execute quantum code. We demystify the shift from static instructions to Dynamic Circuits, allowing for real-time classical logic and control flow directly within your programs, whi…
  continue reading
 
Happy Christmas and Merry Festivus y'all! Today we're releasing a patreon episode, as both of us are away on vacation with the family for the holidays. In this episode we have a meandering discussion about parenting, Robert Kegan's four stages of development, the limits of introspection, and relationship counseling. We discuss Advice for new father…
  continue reading
 
In this episode of the Qubit Value Podcast, we dive into the "Early Utility Scale" era of quantum computing as we break down the critical release of Cirq 1.6.1. We explore how this new stable baseline addresses noise modeling issues and introduces "Willow Pink," a digital twin configuration designed to validate routing and error strategies on 100+ …
  continue reading
 
In this episode, we declare the end of the experimental NISQ era and the arrival of "Utility Scale" quantum computing, where 100+ qubit processors are finally delivering tangible value. We dive deep into the necessity of "hardware-aware" programming using frameworks like Cirq, explaining why developers can no longer treat the chip as a black box bu…
  continue reading
 
In this episode, we explore the pivotal shift in quantum computing as the industry moves away from the raw qubit arms race toward a future defined by error-corrected, "logical" qubits. We break down the diverse hardware landscape of late 2025—comparing the raw speed of superconducting circuits, the unparalleled stability of trapped ions, and the em…
  continue reading
 
This episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast features Guangyu Zhang. Along with his colleagues at the Institute of Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Zhang has bagged the 2025 Physics World Breakthrough of the Year award for creating the first 2D metals. In a wide-ranging conversation, we chat about the motivation behind the team’s res…
  continue reading
 
In this episode, we confront the chilling reality of "Harvest Now, Decrypt Later" strategies, where adversaries collect encrypted data today to decrypt it once quantum capabilities mature. We dive deep into the newly released NIST post-quantum cryptography standards (FIPS 203, 204, and 205) and analyze the aggressive migration timelines mandated by…
  continue reading
 
Technological progress in medicine, as in other fields, emerges from the interplay of incremental refinement and decisive breakthroughs—those moments when a missing element is discovered and the path forward suddenly accelerates. The evolution of endoscopic surgery over the last century illustrates this well. Yet even today, the terminology surroun…
  continue reading
 
Loading …
Copyright 2026 | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | | Copyright
Listen to this show while you explore
Play