Thanks for the input. Learned something new.I have a degree in biophysics and I've worked gigs in the field but not in a long time. I did do a paper on quantum teleportation back in my college days though so I'm pretty familiar with it.
First off, from what I can tell this is a practical breakthrough not a theoretical one. We've been plotting on this shyt for almost 30 years but just haven't figured out the technical side. Now it appears a technical breakthrough has been made.
But to be clear, unless something incredible and fundamental has changed, you CANNOT communicate any information faster than the speed of light. Strangely, this quantum entanglement breakthrough does not actually increase the speed at which information can travel. The reasons behind that are really complex and difficult to describe without taking a crash course in quantum behavior first, but measuring quantumly entangled particles can cause an instantaneous change occur absolutely any distance but that change doesn't give you the information in itself. To make a rough analogy its as if someone sent you an instantaneous message that was 100% gibberish, and simultaneously sent you the code for the message over fiber optics. You can see the first message immediately, but you don't know what it says until you get the code.
So this won't actually increase the speed of long-distance or interstellar messaging at all. What it will do, if some of the more radical ideas are realized, is allow advances in coding and in transferring information to the point where you might actually create unbreakable encrypted codes. The "message" sent by the entangled quantum particles would not be readable by any outside viewer (since to read it would immediately break entanglement), and the code sent by traditional means would be useless without the entangled particles, so the person who uses the code to "read" the entangled particles would have a 100% guarantee that no one in-between could have intercepted the message. There might be other advantages I'm unaware of but encryption is the one I always saw focused on.
Other aspects of quantum computing will potentially bring a new era of more complex computing with processing power far faster than currently available. Basically, rather than interacting with bits of information in a "1" or "0" state, they'll be able to compute with things still in their entangled quantum states where infinite superpositions of states between "1" and "0" can be held simultaneously. Far, far more information possible without increasing the # of particles involved.

Also, one more quick question. So, are you saying that the instantaneous change from measuring the particles cannot be triggered periodically based on a predetermined code ? I get that you have many more options than the standard binary 1 or 0 because of those simultaneous states, but could you forgo all the individual data and use the fluctuation between the unchanged and the changed particle to send an old school message, that was not contingent on the condensed data itself, but rather on simply noting the change on one end of particle pairs?
Please forgive any ignorance on my part. Back in underGrad, I neglected taking the quantum electives in favor of an industrial-power-system course. I figured it would be decades before the quantum stuff would be practical

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