Anonymous ID: 56868f June 22, 2026, 12:45 p.m. No.24745518   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>5547

Yes, the U.S. government owns and operates quantum computers, primarily for research, defense, and scientific purposes. Rather than building all systems internally, agencies leverage public-private partnerships, deploy systems at federal research labs, and invest heavily in domestic quantum development.Key government quantum computing initiatives include:Department of Energy (DOE) Deployments: The DOE hosts operational quantum computers and testbeds directly at national laboratories. For example, a quantum computer developed by IQM is deployed at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The DOE also supports broader research at the Oak Ridge, Argonne, Lawrence Berkeley, and Fermi National Accelerator Laboratories.Intelligence and Defense: The Department of Defense (DOD) and intelligence agencies (like the NSA) actively utilize quantum systems for R&D, cryptographic research, and assessing post-quantum cybersecurity.Federal Investments: The U.S. government is actively expanding its capabilities through massive investments. The Department of Commerce is allocating up to $2 billion from the CHIPS Act across nine domestic quantum companies (including companies like IBM and Rigetti), securing stakes in the future of the technology.To track the overarching progress of these efforts, you can explore the โ National Quantum Initiative platform.

>>24745511

Anonymous ID: 56868f June 22, 2026, 1:12 p.m. No.24745636   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>24745564

>>24745629

 

The Farash surname has historical roots primarily in the Middle East and traces back to the Persian and Arabic word farash (), which translates to "carpet" or "rug".Traditionally, the name is occupational, referring to a craftsman or merchant involved in carpet weaving, textile trading, or a caretaker responsible for laying out rugs and furnishing palaces or mosques.Middle Eastern & Persian Origin: The name historically functioned as a title or occupational surname in Persia, reflecting the cultural significance of traditional rug-making.Eastern European Variant: In some cases, Farash is an anglicized variation of the Hungarian/Slavic surname Farkas or Farkaลก, which means "wolf".Geographic Spread: While common in the Middle East, historical records show the name spreading through migration to regions like the US and UK in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.