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Pakistani-American Scientist Irfan Siddiqi is Top Expert in Quantum Computing

RiazHaq

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http://www.riazhaq.com/2018/12/pakistani-american-scientist-irfan.html

Karachi-born Pakistani-American Dr. Irfan Siddiqi is the head of Lawrence Livermore Quantum Computing Lab at the University of California at Berkeley. He's also one of the architects of the United States Quantum Initiative backed by industry, academia and the federal government.

Silicon Valley Diversity:

Dr. Siddiqi was recently featured on Silicon Valley-based NBC Press Here TV hosted by Scott McGrew. Others who made an appearance in the same show were Krishna Motukuri and Kevin Guo. Motukori is Indian-American founder of Zippin which is pushing automated checkout technology that will obviate the need for buyers to stand in line to pay. Amazon is already using this technology at Amazon Go stores. Kevin Guo is Chinese-American founder of AI startup Hive. This show was a good representation of Silicon Valley's diversity with many immigrant techies at its center. In fact, minorities are now majority is Silicon Valley.

Dr. Siddiqi's Background:

Dr. Siddiqi was born in Karachi, Pakistan. He came to the United States in his teen years with his family and graduated from the Bronx High School of Science, Bronx, NY. Then he got his bachelor's degree from Harvard and Ph.D. at Yale where he worked on superconducting qubits, also written as q-bits. Dr. Siddiqi has been teaching at UC Berkeley since 2006.


Dr. Irfan Siddiqi
Quantum Computing:

In quantum computing, a qubit or quantum bit is the basic unit of quantum information—the quantum version of the classical binary bit physically realized with a two-state device. Here's how Dr. Siddiqui explained quantum computing in an interview with Design News:

"For me, any quantum technology, including quantum computing, is something that takes advantage of entanglement. And entanglement is the idea that if you have different pieces of matter and you put them together, they behave as a single unit. So, for example, each of the bits in a classical computer are independent of each other. If you flip one, it doesn't affect the one next to it. In a quantum computers all of these bits have correlation with each other so they're all tied together like one big mass. In fact, the number of states that they can occupy is exponentially larger because of these linkages between neighboring elements. Quantum computing is the science of manipulating this entangled set of bits for some particular problem of interest in either fundamental science and computation or to do a simulation of the natural world."

Summary:

Dr. Irfan Siddiqui is a Karachi-born Pakistani-American scientist engaged in leading edge research in quantum computing. He's part of the increasingly diverse technology workforce of Silicon Valley, California where immigrants from many emerging economies such as India, Pakistan and China are helping define the future.

Here's a video of Dr. Irfan Siddiqi speaking on quantum computing:






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http://www.riazhaq.com/2018/12/pakistani-american-scientist-irfan.html
 
http://www.riazhaq.com/2018/12/pakistani-american-scientist-irfan.html

Karachi-born Pakistani-American Dr. Irfan Siddiqi is the head of Lawrence Livermore Quantum Computing Lab at the University of California at Berkeley. He's also one of the architects of the United States Quantum Initiative backed by industry, academia and the federal government.

Silicon Valley Diversity:

Dr. Siddiqi was recently featured on Silicon Valley-based NBC Press Here TV hosted by Scott McGrew. Others who made an appearance in the same show were Krishna Motukuri and Kevin Guo. Motukori is Indian-American founder of Zippin which is pushing automated checkout technology that will obviate the need for buyers to stand in line to pay. Amazon is already using this technology at Amazon Go stores. Kevin Guo is Chinese-American founder of AI startup Hive. This show was a good representation of Silicon Valley's diversity with many immigrant techies at its center. In fact, minorities are now majority is Silicon Valley.

Dr. Siddiqi's Background:

Dr. Siddiqi was born in Karachi, Pakistan. He came to the United States in his teen years with his family and graduated from the Bronx High School of Science, Bronx, NY. Then he got his bachelor's degree from Harvard and Ph.D. at Yale where he worked on superconducting qubits, also written as q-bits. Dr. Siddiqi has been teaching at UC Berkeley since 2006.


Dr. Irfan Siddiqi
Quantum Computing:

In quantum computing, a qubit or quantum bit is the basic unit of quantum information—the quantum version of the classical binary bit physically realized with a two-state device. Here's how Dr. Siddiqui explained quantum computing in an interview with Design News:

"For me, any quantum technology, including quantum computing, is something that takes advantage of entanglement. And entanglement is the idea that if you have different pieces of matter and you put them together, they behave as a single unit. So, for example, each of the bits in a classical computer are independent of each other. If you flip one, it doesn't affect the one next to it. In a quantum computers all of these bits have correlation with each other so they're all tied together like one big mass. In fact, the number of states that they can occupy is exponentially larger because of these linkages between neighboring elements. Quantum computing is the science of manipulating this entangled set of bits for some particular problem of interest in either fundamental science and computation or to do a simulation of the natural world."

Summary:

Dr. Irfan Siddiqui is a Karachi-born Pakistani-American scientist engaged in leading edge research in quantum computing. He's part of the increasingly diverse technology workforce of Silicon Valley, California where immigrants from many emerging economies such as India, Pakistan and China are helping define the future.

Here's a video of Dr. Irfan Siddiqi speaking on quantum computing:






Related Links:

Haq's Musings

South Asia Investor Review

Pakistani-American Raises $50 Million For Open RISC Architecture

Muslim-Americans in San Francisco Bay Area

The Trump Phenomenon

Islamophobia in America

Remembering UC Berkeley's Pakistani-American Prof Saba Mahmood

Silicon Valley Pakistani-Americans

Pakistani-American Leads Silicon Valley's Top Incubator

Silicon Valley Pakistanis Enabling 2nd Machine Revolution

Karachi-born Triple Oscar Winning Graphics Artist

Pakistani-American Ashar Aziz's Fire-eye Goes Public

Two Pakistani-American Silicon Valley Techs Among Top 5 VC Deals

Pakistani-American's Game-Changing Vision

Minorities Are Majority in Silicon Valley

http://www.riazhaq.com/2018/12/pakistani-american-scientist-irfan.html

thanks to america and american secular society which gives opportunity to people from poor countries .
 
thanks to america and american secular society which gives opportunity to people from poor countries .

nonsense, these immigrants from poor countries Made US what US is today...if they decide to leave America for their home countries depending on what kind of knowledge they carry they will be eliminated.
 
nonsense, these immigrants from poor countries Made US what US is today...if they decide to leave America for their home countries depending on what kind of knowledge they carry they will be eliminated.
Where will these people will go? If they leave america? To there poor countries ?
 
Where will these people will go? If they leave america? To there poor countries ?

some do after they have made enough money or a change of heart, like Dr. Arfa Siddique

"Siddiqui was born in Pakistan to a Deobandi Muslim family.[3] In 1990, she went to study in the United States and obtained a Ph.D. in neuroscience from Brandeis University in 2001.[9] She returned to Pakistan for a time following the 9/11 attacks and again in 2003 during the war in Afghanistan. Khalid Sheikh Muhammad reportedly named her a courier and financier for Al-Qaeda, after his arrest and interrogation, and she was placed on the FBI Seeking Information - Terrorism list; she remains the only woman to have been featured on the list. Around this time she and her three children disappeared in Pakistan"

but some believe she was caught because she snatched a riffle from US Marine and tried to shoot them...lol
Also notice the link between her and Al-quida because she traveled to Pakistan twice. I traveled to Pakistan 5 times since 9/11 when I was in US
 
some do after they have made enough money or a change of heart, like Dr. Arfa Siddique

"Siddiqui was born in Pakistan to a Deobandi Muslim family.[3] In 1990, she went to study in the United States and obtained a Ph.D. in neuroscience from Brandeis University in 2001.[9] She returned to Pakistan for a time following the 9/11 attacks and again in 2003 during the war in Afghanistan. Khalid Sheikh Muhammad reportedly named her a courier and financier for Al-Qaeda, after his arrest and interrogation, and she was placed on the FBI Seeking Information - Terrorism list; she remains the only woman to have been featured on the list. Around this time she and her three children disappeared in Pakistan"

but some believe she was caught because she snatched a riffle from US Marine and tried to shoot them...lol
Also notice the link between her and Al-quida because she traveled to Pakistan twice. I traveled to Pakistan 5 times since 9/11 when I was in US

she was no neuroscience ,
she was doing her ph.d. in " learning for mentally challenged children " she was in psychology . she did not complete her ph.d.
about rest story you ask her husband how she abandoned her husband for a terrorist . she left her family for jehad and wasted many lives .
 
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thanks to america and american secular society which gives opportunity to people from poor countries .


It Is Bit Of Two Way Traffic Immigrants From Poor Countries Have Also Given America Google Youtube etc.
 
It Is Bit Of Two Way Traffic Immigrants From Poor Countries Have Also Given America Google Youtube etc.

thanks to america it gives talented poors opportunities to flourish in secular enviornment irrespective of their religion and ethnicity , great country america .

But but ...
According to Indians , pakiPaki produces terrorists only?

pakistan is full of talented people in every field .
 
thanks to america and american secular society which gives opportunity to people from poor countries .
So what,s your Opinion about Arab Muslim countries where many indians and other religions people doing there jobs and there poor coutries peoples families live better life.
 
Excellent news...
thanks to america and american secular society which gives opportunity to people from poor countries .
Not just USA, KSA, UAE , UK all have provided the opportunity to the slum dogs from the shithole called Gangadesh. Where Bhindus serve Goras and Arabs Muslim masters to get a better life. The bhindus clean the toilets of Arab Muslim shaikhs with pleasure and pride.
@HRK some negative ratings are needed here for these butthurt slum kutti ke bachas
Please do remember that she was picked up in Karachi by Pakistani agencies, along with her children.



Talent only goes where it can flourish (the OP provides a good example), just like investments go where good returns for acceptable risks are found.
Do not derail the thread and fcuk off.

Excellent news sir quantum mechanics is one of my favorite scientific fields and I wish to study it formally if I can spare some time. Pakistanis have great potential and we should focus on this and AI.
 
Please do remember that she was picked up in Karachi by Pakistani agencies, along with her children.



Talent only goes where it can flourish (the OP provides a good example), just like investments go where good returns for acceptable risks are found.
@Slav Defence Gentleman is trying to derail a positive thread for his own nefarious reasons.Kudos
 
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