 Hi, I'm Mike Murphy and welcome to the short, the news roundup from IBM Research. Announcing the winners of the 2023 IBM Quantum Open Science Prize. Since 2020, the IBM competition has brought together a community to find open-source solutions to big problems in the field, and the judges have selected this year's winners on the theme of quantum state preparation. The submissions were judged on performance, scalability, but most importantly, creativity. First place went to a group of researchers from University College London, and in case you were wondering what the actual task was, teams had to prepare the highly frustrated ground state of a Heisenberg spin half-model on a Kagome lattice using the variational quantum eigen-solver algorithm on an IBM Quantum Falcon device. Try saying that twice fast. IBM WatsonX is getting drafted into ESPN fantasy football. IBM recently announced new features made in collaboration with ESPN to the popular fantasy football app. Thanks to the power of AI built on IBM's WatsonX, 11 million fantasy football users now have access to new personalized waiver grades for their league and trade grades that evaluate the potential benefits of a trade. But unfortunately, no amount of AI power will be able to fix if your quarterback has the seizing and ending injury in the first quarter that they play though. I'm sorry. And in case you missed it, let's learn a bit more about generative AI. Artificial intelligence has gone through many cycles of hype, but even to the skeptics, the release of chatGPT seems to have marked a turning point. It's one of the most popular examples of a generative AI system powered by a large language model. Generative AI refers to deep learning models that can take broad data like all of Wikipedia or the collected works of Rembrandt and learn how to generate outputs when prompted. For more on the latest research from IBM, make sure you subscribe to our newsletter, Future Forward. Until next time.