Author: Robert Richardson

  • The American restaurant is on life support | The Counter

    We’re eating at street-corner stalls and food trucks, in front of the TV and at the grocery—everywhere but restaurants. They might not be here when we get back.In a week, The New York Times would run a rave review of FieldTrip, a rice-centric little place in Harlem, New York City. Crowds of eager diners would suddenly descend, and the Sweetgreen chain, as well as the folks at Rockefeller Center and developers around the country, would get in touch about possible alliances.

    Source: The American restaurant is on life support | The Counter

  • Financial markets interactive app for students

    This is a live interactive dictionary with 9800 presets that searches the net for everything about Economics, Finance, Money and Banking. Pick and click, no typing, never goes out of date and searches in 10 languages!

    New for 2020, a new series of Economic Interactive Notes, Financial Market, Money and Banking charts, graphs, videos, terms and definitions with over 9800 quick links! Great for students on anybody that wants to keep up with all the terminology. This is an interactive series that helps guide you and keeps you up to date on all the economic terminology past and present including access to charts, graphs and video presentations on the subject. A great educational learning tool too; that keeps everybody on the same page! In the guidebook, you look in the index of what you want to search and then you click on the button next to it, Google, Bing, Yahoo, Yandex, Baidu, Duckduckgo, Facebook, Twitter, Slide Share, YouTube or Pinterest and you instantly have you search items displayed. For PC, Mac, Pad or iPhone.

    Search in any of the ten languages available.

    Free copies available for educational institutions and those with learning disabilities.

    Please check out the complete line of city travel series of search guide books at Kobo, Amazon, Google App and Walmart.

    Buy here now

  • Apple to pay up to $500 million to settle U.S. lawsuit over slow iPhones – Reuters

    Apple Inc (AAPL.O) has agreed to pay up to $500 million to settle litigation accusing it of quietly slowing down older iPhones as it launched new models, to induce owners to buy replacement phones or batteries.

    Source: Apple to pay up to $500 million to settle U.S. lawsuit over slow iPhones – Reuters

  • RG Richardson Interactive Glossary

    The RG Richardson Interactive Multi-language.
    This is all about no more typing with over 9900 preset searches for 8 Search Engines! These guides never go out of date due to the power of the internet! Translate in your language through your browser. You can now avoid spelling mistakes and language difficulties making guide simple enough for even for those with learning disabilities to use. Stop using paper!

  • Narvik 2020 – Norway welcomes the world | White Circus – Weiß Zirkus – Cirque Blanc

    In one week, 500 of the best young ski racers in the world from 50 nations will gather for the 2020 FIS Alpine Junior World Ski Championships. This year, for the first time ever, the Championship w…

    Source: Narvik 2020 – Norway welcomes the world | White Circus – Weiß Zirkus – Cirque Blanc

  • Fletchers Espace Culinaire – Montreal, Québec

    The menu itself curates Jewish cuisine from the last several millennia. The Middle East is represented with  rosewater chai and massafan cookies, the Mediterranean with a halloumi tartine and za’atar fried eggs, and North Africa with harissa mayo atop breakfast sandwiches.Of course, Jewish staples take center stage, but not without  regional twists. A Morrocan-style bagel board comes with preserved lemon cream cheese and ras-el hanout gravlax. Gefilte fish appears twice on the breakfast menu, in club sandwich and taco form. A show-stopping chocolate babka french toast winks toward Lebanon with pomegranate molasses and candied pistachios.

    Source: Fletchers Espace Culinaire – Montreal, Québec – Gastro Obscura

  • Quantum entanglement

    Quantum entanglement over 30 miles of fiber has brought super secure internet closer

    The lab test suggests a reliable quantum internet between cities might be possible.

    by Douglas Heaven Feb 12, 2020

    Albert Einstein wanted nothing to do with it: he mocked the strange concept of quantum entanglement as “spooky action at a distance.” But a hundred years on, Einstein’s bugbear could help create an ultra-secure internet network, thanks to the most reliable technique yet for entangling nodes along miles of fiber-optic cable.

    With entanglement, an object can be put into a quantum superposition of multiple states—like Schrödinger’s cat, both alive and dead at once—and that superposition can be shared with another object. In theory, these objects will maintain that connection even when separated, so that measuring one reveals the state of the other, no matter how far away. 

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    This isn’t merely of interest to quantum physicists. A quantum internet would allow ultra-secure communication of sensitive messages. One technique is to encrypt a pair of digital keys, a technology known as quantum key distribution (QKD). If two people both have these keys, they can talk without fear of being snooped on, because an eavesdropper would change the state of the keys and be found out.

    But QKD relies on measuring the state of the quantum-encrypted keys, and since that measurement can be affected by conditions in the sending and receiving devices, you need to know their exact physical conditions. That can be impractical, because even tiny physical fluctuations can throw off the measurements.

    That’s why the oddities of quantum entanglement have been seized upon to form the basis of an even better approach. Entanglement is much harder to pull off but in the long run could provide a more useful quantum internet than quantum keys. By entangling nodes on a network, you set up a connection between the entangled particles that bypasses the devices themselves, avoiding the unrealistic requirement that you know their exact state.

    At least in principle. In practice, entanglement also requires ideal conditions. Quantum systems are sensitive to the tiniest disturbances: a change in temperature or a slight movement can throw everything off. A groundbreaking experiment in 2015 showed that quantum entanglement worked across a distance of just less than a mile (1.3 kilometers). In the years since, researchers have separated entangled particles by sending them down optical fibers and even up to a satellite and back. But the reliability has been very low. 

    In a paper in Nature today, Pan Jian-Wei at the University of Science and Technology of China, in Hefei, and his colleagues describe an experiment in which they demonstrate entanglement through more than 30 miles of fiber coiled in a lab, with lower transmission errors than previous attempts. “This is a big improvement,” says Pan, whom Nature has called the “father of quantum.”

    The trick was to find efficient ways to entangle two particles. The team used an atom, which stayed put, and a photon, which was sent down the fiber. They found that they were able to create an entangled pair of nodes much more reliably than was demonstrated in previous experiments—including the one setting the mile benchmark, which it beat by five orders of magnitude. 

    How big a deal is this result? “It’s nice, but not nearly as big as it sounds,” says Stephanie Wehner, a researcher at QuTech, a quantum computing and quantum internet research centre in Delft in the Netherlands. Pan’s team used 30 miles of coiled fiber, which still demands an impressive degree of control over the whole system, but demonstrating entanglement between two nodes in one location is much easier than when they are actually 30 miles apart. 

    But distance is one thing. Pan’s team also claims that its set-up is more reliable than previous examples and thus lays better groundwork for an actual quantum internet. Having demonstrated the techniques with a coiled fiber, he thinks they can readily extend them to work in a straight line. The methods developed in this work could be used to build quantum networks between cities in the near future, he says.

  • How to DIY Skiing’s Most Expensive Cocktails

    More chit chat from the Bunny Trail!

    Sure, you can plunk down big bucks on an over-the-top cocktail at a four-star hotel after a day on the mountain. Or you can do après your way: served out of a paper bag while sitting around the campfire. Below, you’ll find some of the most expensive drinks on offer this après season and how to DIY them in true dirtbag fashion.

    Source: How to DIY Skiing’s Most Expensive Cocktails | Outside Online

  • Atlanta Interactive Guide-multi-language

    Atlanta Interactive Guide

    Stop typing and start using the power of the internet to search with over 9900 preset searches in the latest Interactive City Guide from the author, R.G.Richardson and search in over ten languages.

    No more typing, just pick and click with over 9900 quick links for greater accuracy and ease. Stop using paper guides and start using our interactive city search guides and brochures that include Google and Yahoo that never out of date!

    Use as white or yellow pages and use it even more often to keep up with what is going on and happening in your city! It also makes for a good gift or promotional item for somebody that has just moved to a new city.  Real Estate agents use it as a promotional tool and you use to check Real Estate listing, condos, or rental apartments available in the city.

    With over 230 city guides and brochures for sale on Amazon, Kobo and Indigo and here at a discount RG Richardson City Guides in epub and pdf format.

    Don’t have an eReader, no problems as you can get on from Amazon and use then you are all set up with Kindle. You can also download a PDF file to your desktop and you are all set up that way too.

    Interactive City Guide let you use the internet’s full power by eliminating errors with keywords. Google, Bing, Yahoo, Yandex, Duckduckgo, Facebook, Twitter, Baidu, SlideShare, YouTube or Pinterest; click on the button and you are there; just pick and click the button, no typing. Fully mobile – it works on any device with an eBook reader and that has access to the Internet WiFi anywhere. Don’t think about typing, you are good to go with better results and fewer typos. Sit back in the coffee shop and search away on their WiFi! Our guides are organized into several targeted information Guides including hotels, restaurants, pubs, historical sites, transportation, attractions, real estate and events. Stay up to date with what is happening in your city!

    Our interactive ebooks search the web and are organized into several targeted information Guides. Quick links including hotels, restaurants, transportation, maps, hostels, pubs, family attractions, historical sites and on it goes for a complete guide that tells you everything you need to know including how to pack!

    Buy Kindle City Guide at Amazon

    Buy on Walmart or Google Play

    New employment, shopping and real estate guides.

  • Children’s Hospital honours Montrealer killed in Jay Peak ski accident | Montreal Gazette

    Bruce Charron died in the most freakish of ski accidents last February, the day before he was to be honoured for helping to raise nearly $5 million for the Montreal Children’s Hospital. He never knew that he was about to receive an award.But now the hospital and his friends are making sure Charron gets his proper due.On Oct. 20, a tribute for Charron will take place at the Tavern on the Square with proceeds going to the hospital. With his wife, Anne, in attendance, the Children’s Hospital Foundation will announce that a hospital room will be named for Charron. The hospital had already presented its Community Leadership and Volunteer Award of Excellence for Charron to his family.

    Source: Children’s Hospital honours Montrealer killed in Jay Peak ski accident | Montreal Gazette