Iran's recently announced, and very quickly debunked, "quantum processor" now comes with an official withdrawal statement from Imam Khomeini Uni's Research vice chancellor.
«The unveiling of the FPGA board in the said conference has conveyed this false mentality to the country's media space that the said board is a quantum processor, which was not the case,» says the research vice chancellor (machine translated via Tansim News).
A little while back, Iran's Imam Khomeini University of Marine Sciences and Technologies (RA) unveiled what it called the «first product of the quantum processing algorithm.» Of course the entire tech and science community jumped straight down their throat to explain that, actually, it was a $600 dev board you could buy on Amazon.
The board had turned out to be a ZedBoard Zynq-7000 development SoC, and it's true spec is nowhere near enough to power a quantum processor. Imagine flipping qubits with just 256GB of storage, 512MB of DDR3 RAM, and only a dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 processor.
With the crushing weight of the media now upon them, the country has had to do a full U-turn on the announcement, though it makes it clear that «the principle of the problem of the proposed algorithm, dealing with the disturbance of surface vessels' positioning systems, is important and approved for the promotion of maritime security.»
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So while the board being shown didn't turn out to be what Iran said it was at all, it was still big news for the country's navy. I guess that kind of makes up for the disinformation?
Wh
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