National Strategy Workshop on Quantum Information Science

Next week, I'll be at a workshop in Vienna, VA that has been organized to help come up with a national strategy for public investment in quantum information science and technology.

To quote from the workshop website:

This Workshop on Quantum Information Science (QIS) has been organized in response to the NSTC report. It brings together leading theorists and experimenters drawn from physical science, computer science, mathematics, and engineering who will assess recent progress in QIS and identify major goals and challenges for future research.

The report in question, titled "A Federal Vision for Quantum Information Science came out this January, from the US National Science and Technology Council which is part of the White House's Office of Science and Technology Policy.

All in all, a very interesting and promising development, which suggests serious potential for US government support for research in quantum information science, which is to say quantum computation, quantum computing, quantum cryptography, the use of quantum information science concepts to understand and engineer the behavior of complex physical systems, including quantum control and quantum metrology.  The report emphasizes computation and the understanding of new quantum states of matter and quantum phase transitions.  The organization appears to have been fairly rapid---probably carried out at Caltech, where John Preskill heads the Institute for Quantum Information, since that's where the website is located and the administrative coordinator is the IQI's.

The invited speaker lineup looks excellent, though some have complained that it's not representative of some aspects of quantum information research (metrology, i.e. precision quantum measurement, is covered only lightly) and some top US groups (like the quantum cryptography effort led by Richard Hughes at Los Alamos) are missing (though I don't know why).  Evenings will involve open discussions on strategy for QIS research, though I worry we may be burned out after full days of excellent technical presentations.

I'm looking forward to hearing Anne Broadbent talk about Universal Blind Quantum Computation with Joseph Fitzsimmons and Elham Kashefi, and not only because a crucial component of it is the use of quantum authentication codes, a concept developed my collaborators Claude Crepeau, Daniel Gottesman, Adam Smith, Alain Tapp, and me.  (Hey, this is my blog, so shameless self-promotion is de rigeur.)

Maverick "Above the Law" 2005 Barossa Valley Shiraz

2005 was a superb year, in surprisingly similar ways, in many of the most important winegrowing areas around the world.  California and South Australia certainly did well, and I'm told 2005 Bordeaux were excellent too.  (I haven't swilled enough of the latter to know without consulting my tasting notes...)  So I've gotten into a project of checking out Aussie Shiraz, especially from the Barossa and McClaren Vale...so many of them are just delicious, and some are truly great wines.  So I've just realized what others have probably known for more than a century...that this is one of the great grape/wine region combinations of the world.

What we may have here is a chance to benefit from the McCain campaign flameout last year... I don't know for sure that this wine was named and released with an eye to becoming the high-end swill of Republican conventioneers in St. Paul---indeed, perhaps the subtitle "Above the Law" was intended to underline the Obama campaign's theme ("more of the same").   But whatever the reason (the label actually say it's a tribute to the masive influx of immigrant mavericks to the Australian gold fields in 1851) for the too-cute name and the image of a Colt Navy Model 1851 pistol on the label of this puppy from Pure Love Wines, the wine hits the bullseye.

According to my tasting notes this is a full-bodied, pretty smooth wine with medium finegrained tannins, rich  blueberry and blackberry fruit, some spiciness or tarriness---one of the best "budget" Aussie Shirazes I've tasted yet.  Still excellent on the second day (after overnight refrigeration).  My wife liked it too.

I've only tasted one or two Aussie Shirazes this year that were better (a Two Dudes Gnarly Hands Two Hands Gnarly Dudes Shiraz) that I tasted at Vino Volo (BWI), which was sold out next time I passed through, at way more expensive, would be one; a 2005 Slipstream as well.)  This partakes of some of their complexity and tight structure, but is definitely not as full of smokiness, tarriness, and such.  In exchange, it veers toward lush, delicious fruitiness but without getting sloppy.

On further investigation the origin of the wine is described here.

The $15 price targeted is a great deal for this wine.  Major kudos to Pure Love's Jayson Woodbridge for this one, and I'll be on the lookout for its siblings at the same target price:  Barossa Jack, Desert Eagle, and Layer Cake.   What, no Community Organizer?  No matter, just buy this wine, get out your corkscrews, and drill... whoops, it has a Stelvin closure.  Unscrew, baby, unscrew!

Joseph Stiglitz on banks and the bailout. He doesn't sound happy...

Joseph Stiglitz on the bank bailout, from Bloomberg:

“All the ingredients they have so far are weak, and there are several missing ingredients,” Stiglitz said in an interview yesterday. The people who designed the plans are “either in the pocket of the banks or they’re incompetent.”

Stiglitz is only one of the world's best economists;  when he talks, you really *should* listen.