Oakland, California (16 May 2010) - Lead investigator, Richard L. Amoroso, director of The Noetic Advanced Studies Institute through his international team of researchers in conjunction with British hedge fund partner, Steriwave Quantum Computing, LLC managed by billionaire Francisco Fucilla has received a 10 million pound ($15 million) investment for constructing a commercially viable universal bulk quantum computer. Work is expected to begin in July. Other quantum computing models utilizing room size cryogenic refrigeration apparatus believe quantum computing to be decades away. Amoros's design is unique in that the prototype is table top in size and operates at room temperature by discovery of a method that violates the quantum uncertainty principle (produces decoherence during initialization and measurement)
Quantum Computing (QC) has remained elusive beyond a few qubits. Nobelist R. Feynman’s recommended use of a “synchronization backbone” for achieving bulk implementation has generally been abandoned as intractable;
Moore’s law (from Gordon Moore, founder of Intel) states that since the invention of the integrated circuit in 1958, the number of transistors on a chip doubles about every two years, as well as the processing speed, accompanied by a corresponding reciprocal shrinkage in the size of a transistor. Right on schedule the Intel Itanium had 1 billion transistors in 2008. Extrapolating Moore's law (never wrong in over 50 years) commercial Quantum Computers should be available between 2012 and 2015.



