Every other year the EU tries to pass another mass surveillance law - and the EU court of human rights rules it illegal.
Every other year the EU tries to pass another mass surveillance law - and the EU court of human rights rules it illegal.
You’re right, I mixed it up with the complex numbers being isomorphic to R^2. Thanks for clearing it up!
Love btw how I get downvoted for an honest mistake.
Is this some joke I’m not getting? Cause yes, real numbers are the closure of irrational numbers, but imaginary numbers are just isomorphic to them.
Well, as the URL says, that’s logistic growth and not exponential growth.
Pretty sure a court told them to.
Yeah, you’re technically right, but everyone just fully associates Pokémon with Nintendo.
Most of the time? Doesn’t it mainly lag when moving to a different region? It also looks really good.
Well, except Pokémon. But we don’t talk about Pokémon.
USB plugs are spinors: They need a 4π rotation until they reach their initial orientation.
Honestly, I could see Jacob Collier doing just that.
Maybe I just mixed up the fact that proper industrial use is vastly overestimated/overhyped with that there is little use. I will do some research.
I don’t think I was talking about this, interesting. Because in the video I mentioned she was fine with trans athletes competing together with cis athletes, which seemed very progressive to me. But I’m happy to be proven wrong.
Thanks for this productive discourse, not ad hominem at all. You’re welcome to criticize my views and I’m happy to learn. And I am doing my physics masters, so I think I am no complete idiot. But this is also not productive.
Edit: I’m focusing on cosmology, I’m not claiming to be a quantum computing expert. That was just my last state of knowledge and I’m always happy to learn.
Are you talking about her video on trans athletes? I don’t remember it being transphobic.
She might have strong opinions on particle physics and I do take them with a grain of salt, but I don’t see objectively wrong things in there.
I am a physicist and truly appreciate the effect of quantum computing on our simulations, but with “real world” I meant proper industrial use. And for that, there are hardly any algorithms known except Shor’s. When the CEO of Deutsche Bank says he will do his bank transactions on a quantum computer, you know the topic is over-hyped.
Currently, there is basically only one real world application we really know: Factoring numbers into prime factors. And we can’t know for sure whether there will be more even.
You’re right, I did not know that. Thanks!
Judging by the name RungeKutta62, named after a class of numerical integration methods and thus two mathematicians, I’d say they’re a nerd themselves.