From: quantum-announce-bounces@mit.edu <quantum-announce-bounces@mit.edu> On Behalf Of Shenggen Timothy Zheng
Sent: Tuesday, October 8, 2019 2:44 AM
To: quantum-announce@mit.edu
Subject: Re: QIP 2020 Call for Poster Submissions
QIP 2020 Call for Poster Submissions
QIP 2020 is the 23rd Annual Conference on Quantum Information Processing and will be held at the Hilton Shenzhen Shekou Nanhai Hotel in Shenzhen, China, hosted by the Shenzhen Institute for Quantum Science and Engineering at the Southern University of Science and Technology and by the Center for Quantum Computing at the Peng Cheng Laboratory. QIP 2020 will feature a tutorial program, plenary talks, contributed talks, and a poster session. More information can be found at the conference website (http://www.szpclab.com/qip2020).
We invite contributions for posters now. There will be best posters awarded.
http://www.szpclab.com/qip2020#/submissions
Important dates
Poster-only submission deadline: Sunday, 13 October 2019 at 23:59 Anywhere-on-Earth (AoE)
Notification (for both talks and posters): Sunday, 27 October 2019
For poster-only submissions, only a title and abstract are required (i.e., an extended abstract is not needed). A technical manuscript can be attached. Please indicate in the required field "speaker" the person that will present the poster at the conference.
Shenzhen, is a major city in Guangdong province, southeastern China. It lies along the coast of the South China Sea and immediately north of Hong Kong.
If you would like to catch a glimpse of how China looked like back thousands of years ago, Beijing and Xi’an are good options, so is Shanghai of China hundreds of years ago, and Shenzhenrecent decades of years. Very Excited to have your presence at QIP 2020, Shenzhen.
In 1979 Shenzhen was a small border city of some 30,000 inhabitants that served as a customs stop into mainland China from Hong Kong. That year, it was declared a special economic zone—i.e., one of several cities along the coast of China that were opened to foreign investment, technology, and managerial expertise through the establishment of foreign-owned, joint-venture, and other business enterprises without the prior approval of the central government. Vast numbers of workers and professionals flooded into it to work in factories that produced electronics, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, textiles, building materials, and processed foods.
The rapid growth rate in the region became known in China as “Shenzhen speed,” and the success of the project prompted the Chinese government to convert several other coastal cities into special economic zones and to encourage modernization in different fields. Shenzhen became an experimental zone for Chinese economic reform and liberalization. The city’s districts house many successful high-tech companies including Tencent, DJI, BGI (China’s largest genome company), BYD (electric cars and batteries), telecommunications conglomerates ZTE and Huawei, and Shunfeng (e-commerce and logistics). China Merchants Group and the world’s largest insurer Ping An also call Shenzhen home.
Shenzhen has also founded its own universities and colleges, including Shenzhen University (1983) and Southern University of Science and Technology (2011). In addition, some major Chinese higher-education institutions, notably Peking University and Tsinghua (Qinghua) University, have established branch campuses in the city.
It is really worth to visit Shenzhen to try the modern technology in China, such as pay with your face and so on.
Best regards
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Center for Quantum Computing, Peng Cheng Laboratory
鹏城实验室 量子研究中心
&
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Shenggen Timothy Zheng <zhengshenggen@gmail.com> 于2019年9月30日周一 下午3:56写道:
QIP 2020 Call for Poster Submissions
QIP 2020 is the 23rd Annual Conference on Quantum Information Processing and will be held at the Hilton Shenzhen Shekou Nanhai Hotel in Shenzhen, China, hosted by the Shenzhen Institute for Quantum Science and Engineering at the Southern University of Science and Technology and by the Center for Quantum Computing at the Peng Cheng Laboratory. QIP 2020 will feature a tutorial program, plenary talks, contributed talks, and a poster session. More information can be found at the conference website (http://www.szpclab.com/qip2020).
We invite contributions for posters now. There will be best posters awarded.
http://www.szpclab.com/qip2020#/submissions
Important dates
Poster-only submission deadline: Sunday, 13 October 2019 at 23:59 Anywhere-on-Earth (AoE)
Notification (for both talks and posters): Sunday, 27 October 2019
For poster-only submissions, only a title and abstract are required (i.e., an extended abstract is not needed). A technical manuscript can be attached. Please indicate in the required field "speaker" the person that will present the poster at the conference.
Shenzhen, is a major city in Guangdong province, southeastern China. It lies along the coast of the South China Sea and immediately north of Hong Kong.
If you would like to catch a glimpse of how China looked like back thousands of years ago, Beijing and Xi’an are good options, so is Shanghai of China hundreds of years ago, and Shenzhenrecent decades of years. Very Excited to have your presence at QIP 2020, Shenzhen.
In 1979 Shenzhen was a small border city of some 30,000 inhabitants that served as a customs stop into mainland China from Hong Kong. That year, it was declared a special economic zone—i.e., one of several cities along the coast of China that were opened to foreign investment, technology, and managerial expertise through the establishment of foreign-owned, joint-venture, and other business enterprises without the prior approval of the central government. Vast numbers of workers and professionals flooded into it to work in factories that produced electronics, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, textiles, building materials, and processed foods.
The rapid growth rate in the region became known in China as “Shenzhen speed,” and the success of the project prompted the Chinese government to convert several other coastal cities into special economic zones and to encourage modernization in different fields. Shenzhen became an experimental zone for Chinese economic reform and liberalization. The city’s districts house many successful high-tech companies including Tencent, DJI, BGI (China’s largest genome company), BYD (electric cars and batteries), telecommunications conglomerates ZTE and Huawei, and Shunfeng (e-commerce and logistics). China Merchants Group and the world’s largest insurer Ping An also call Shenzhen home.
Shenzhen has also founded its own universities and colleges, including Shenzhen University (1983) and Southern University of Science and Technology (2011). In addition, some major Chinese higher-education institutions, notably Peking University and Tsinghua (Qinghua) University, have established branch campuses in the city.
It is really worth to visit Shenzhen to try the modern technology in China, such as pay with your face and so on.
Best regards
---------------------------------------------------------------------Shenggen (Timothy) Zheng 郑盛根
Center for Quantum Computing, Peng Cheng Laboratory
鹏城实验室 量子研究中心
&
Shenzhen Institute for Quantum Science and Engineering (SIQSE)
Southern University of Science and Technology (SUSTech)
Xueyuan Avenue 1088, Nanshan District
Shenzhen, P. R. China
深圳市量子科学与工程研究院
南方科技大学
深圳市南山区学苑大道1088号
-----------------------------------------------------------------------