An article in New Scientist ("The grand quantum race", Feb 15 2025, pp 8-9) says we'll probably never have personal quantum computers. This seems to be because of the article's "necessary first step (of quantum entanglement)" requiring extremely cold temperatures near absolute zero. A new form of entanglement based on cosmology's Holographic Principle would be independent of temperatures and could make the computers useful.

The principle says the 3rd dimension may be a projection of information in a 2nd dimension. It might unify the positions of a particle "here" and a particle "there" in the following way - quantum events which may include possession by particles of both positive and negative electric charges (able to totally or partly cancel) would, as electronics teaches, generate binary digits.

These bits enable reprogramming of the 2nd dimension which gives rise to the 3rd dimension, causing separation and distance to be deleted between the particles or wave functions. Applied on a universal scale, such deletion between all particles in the cosmos might produce what is called the wave function of the universe.

This deletion could be interpreted as quantum entanglement not being "spooky action at a distance" (Albert Einstein's words) but as obeying Special Relativity and being local.

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