Q-bit data transfer efficiency
As expensive as quantum entangled particles are it course to me that there efficient use would be a priority.
Warning some computer jargon follows
Instead of using each entangled particle to transmit one bit of information I believe that you can send a word consisting of several bites with each entangled particle.
First assign each pair of entangled particles a number starting at 0,1,2,3,… ensure that both devices agree on the numbers.
When you wish to transmit some information break it into words of a agreed length (say 5 bites of 8 bits) if this data is interpreted as a unsigned integer it is a number between 0 and 1.1 trillion (10^12) we will call this number N.
Now to transmit the word you activate only the entangled particle at position which you previously numbered N. the receiving computer will know exactly what 5 bites of information you wished to transmit.
To correct for the gap in our sequence of entangled particles all the particles numbered greater than N have their number reduced by 1
This dose of cause require that you keep a buffer of 1.1 trillion entangled particles, once you drop below that you need to reduce your word size.
Streaming a conference call would require uncompressed video and a small reservoir is good for 10 hours. At current standards 180p 10 hours would be 1194 trilion bits (probably more in the future)
Therefore the listed small reservoir contains 1194 trilion bits. After the modification it is able to transmit 10.89 trilion hours of video While this may use slightly more processor power than the way the book describes cheep gaming consoles of the early 21st century could still render the video in real time. QE communication requires pairs of entangled particles known as qubits. … Each bit of data transmitted between these two QE comms uses up one qubit.