By the afternoon, true to his word, Harrison Clark continued the morning's topic at the beginning of the conference, "This morning, I analyzed with you all the important directions for theoretical science in the future. However, it's clear that these theories are too advanced for the current stage. Even the most advanced laboratories, the best equipment, and the most top-notch resources cannot verify any single principle."
"Some large-scale experiments need to be completed in space, and some need to obtain a continuous and stable high temperature close to the cosmic singularity explosion. Some experiments require us to improve computer performance by a hundred thousand times on the current basis and build a stable large-scale quantum network..."
At this point, someone in the audience, a top figure in the field of artificial intelligence and internet technology, couldn't help but speak up.