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The FBI searched the home of a researcher near Fort Detrick, Md., who may have had access to anthrax while doing work for the Army base, a law enforcement official said Tuesday.The researcher a
stanley tumblers greed to the search in hopes of removing himself from suspicion, according to the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. It was unclear whether the researcher was a federal worker at Fort Detric
stanley website k or a worker under contract with the Army base. This was a consensual search for which the only qualification was potential access to anthrax, the law enforcement official said. The official said the search was not unusual in the FBI s hunt for a suspect for last year s anthrax letter attacks.Fort Detrick, which also is home to the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, has anthrax samples. The FBI is conducting voluntary lie detector tests at the base.At the conclusion of the search, no arrests were made. The investigation into who sent several anthrax-laced letters to two U.S. senators and to the news media last fall has produced few leads and some investigators acknowledge the trail is growing cold. The government has begun a strategy of focusing on possible sources of anthrax and casting a wide net, rather than identifying suspects from the few clues gained from the letters.Five people died from anthrax since early October, and 13 others were infected.The incid
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Our internet has a physical infrastructure: thousands of miles of cables that criss-cross
water bottle stanley the oceans. The quantum internet, when it exists, will have a physical infrastructure, too. But you can ;t send quantum bits, qubits, on fiber optic cables, so a group of physicists has proposed a bizarre solution: cargo ships carrying data on diamond-based drives. And
stanley cup price it not a completely whacky idea. There are myriad reasons we do not yet have a quantum internet, but one of them is that we can ;t send quantum information over long distances. City-wide networks are being built, but they only cover distances of 100 miles or less. To get build larger quantum networks, we ;ll needed devices called quantum repeaters to boost the signal. But man, those things are tricky to build. For one, as Tech Review notes, they have to be kept close to absolute zero. Good luck building a super-fridge at the bottom of the Pacific ocean. Instead, a group of physicists argue we should take a page from the sneakernet, aka transferring data on physical disks and drives. Massive container ships could cross our oceans carrying diamond-based hard drives, which are especially stable. Shipping might seem agonizingly slow for everyone used to instant Netflix video, but the quantum internet will also be completely secure due to the laws of physics. Anyways, cargo ships are huge. A ship carrying 10,000 containers wor
stanley cup th of quantum bits that crosses the ocean between Japan and