the the first working quantum bit based on a single atom in silicon was created.

“A research team led by Australian engineers has created the first working quantum bit based on a single atom in silicon, opening the way to ultra-powerful quantum computers of the future.
In a landmark paper published today in the journal Nature, the team describes how it was able to both read and write information using the spin, or magnetic orientation, of an electron bound to a single phosphorus atom embedded in a silicon chip.
“For the first time, we have demonstrated the ability to represent and manipulate data on the spin to form a quantum bit, or ‘qubit’, the basic unit of data for a quantum computer,” says Scientia Professor Andrew Dzurak. “This really is the key advance towards realising a silicon quantum computer based on single atoms.”
Dr Andrea Morello and Professor Dzurak from the UNSW School of Electrical Engineering and Telecommunications lead the team. It includes researchers from the University of Melbourne and University College, London.
“This is a remarkable scientific achievement – governing nature at its most fundamental level – and has profound implications for quantum computing,” says Dzurak.
A research team led by Australian engineers has created the first working quantum bit based on a single atom in silicon, opening the way to ultra-powerful quantum computers of the future.
Dr Morello says that quantum computers promise to solve complex problems that are currently impossible on even the world’s largest supercomputers: “These include data-intensive problems, such as cracking modern encryption codes, searching databases, and modelling biological molecules and drugs.”
The new finding follows on from a 2010 study also published in Nature, in which the same UNSW group demonstrated the ability to read the state of an electron’s spin. Discovering how to write the spin state now completes the two-stage process required to operate a quantum bit.
Single-atom writer a landmark for quantum computing
Project leaders Andrew Dzurak (left) and Andrea Morello (right), with Ph.D. student and lead author Jarryd Pla (centre). Credit: University of New South Wales
The new result was achieved by using a microwave field to gain unprecedented control over an electron bound to a single phosphorous atom, which was implanted next to a specially-designed silicon transistor. Professor David Jamieson, of the University of Melbourne’s School of Physics, led the team that precisely implanted the phosphorous atom into the silicon device.
UNSW PhD student Jarryd Pla, the lead author on the paper, says: “We have been able to isolate, measure and control an electron belonging to a single atom, all using a device that was made in a very similar way to everyday silicon computer chips.”
Single-atom writer a landmark for quantum computing
Team leader David Jamieson (left) with Changyi Yang in the CQC2T cleanrooms at the University of Melbourne with the special quantum computer device chip holder ready to be loaded into the ion implantation system. Credit: University of Melbourne
As Dr Morello notes: “This is the quantum equivalent of typing a number on your keyboard. This has never been done before in silicon, a material that offers the advantage of being well understood scientifically and more easily adopted by industry. Our technology is fundamentally the same as is already being used in countless everyday electronic devices, and that’s a trillion-dollar industry.”
The team’s next goal is to combine pairs of quantum bits to create a two-qubit logic gate – the basic processing unit of a quantum computer.
Journal reference: Nature search and more info website”
http://phys.org/news/2012-09-single-atom-writer-landmark-quantum.html

MPAA & RIAA: If People Can Sell Foreign Purchased Content Without Paying Us Again, US Economy May Collapse

FIRST SALE RIGHTS: Here’s the real problem: the RIAA and MPAA want to have their cake and eat it too. If products bought abroad and then imported into the US don’t get first sale rights, then it seems only reasonable that they shouldn’t get US copyright protection either.

MPAA & RIAA: If People Can Sell Foreign Purchased Content Without Paying Us Again, US Economy May Collapse

We’ve written a few times about the upcoming Kirtsaeng case before the Supreme Court concerning first sale rights. If you don’t recall, the 2nd Circuit appears to have wiped out the first sale doctrine for content purchased outside the country that you want to resell within the US. As we noted, there are significant worries about how such a ruling could really harm innovation. At issue was a guy who bought textbooks abroad and resold them in the US (for less than the cover price that the publishers wanted students to buy). The courts basically found that because the textbooks were made outside the US, they weren’t “lawfully made under this title,” which is some clumsy phrasing that’s at issue here.
Of course, thanks to our copyright maximalism, under Kirtsaeng, if a product is made outside the US and then imported, US copyright law appears to apply to almost everything that’s copyrightable… except that first sale rights go away. If that seems dangerous, you get a sense of how important the Supreme Court’s ruling in Kirtsaeng can be, hopefully by bringing back some sanity, and showing that if you legally purchase some digital content you have the right to resell it.
It appears that the RIAA and MPAA are pretty scared about this possibility. They’ve filed quite the amicus brief in the case claiming that buying goods overseas and selling them in the US is the equivalent of piracy. No joke:

Copyright protection is essential to the health of the motion picture and music industries and the U.S. economy as a whole. Like the sale of “pirated” copies, unauthorized importation of copies of protected works made overseas and intended only for sale in a foreign market can undercut or eliminate the economic benefit that Congress intended to provide under the Copyright Act.

Oh, and it gets worse . . . .
<SNIP>
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20120920/01565420443/mpaa-riaa-if-people-can-sell-foreign-purchased-content-without-paying-us-again-us-economy-may-collapse.shtml
MORE:
Movies in the Classroom. MPAA Film Censorship Secret Cartel rates films for the past 80 years. Motion Picture Association of America rates films.
K12 PUBLIC EDUCATION – Truth and Reality How the World Really Works.
WILL THE MPAA BE ABLE TO CENSOR ART?
Preservation vs. Copyright
Organisations like the RIAA and MPAA, as well as its promoters, have no interest in promoting the arts and sciences – our learning has been locked up.