Geez. Give the actual scientists some credit, dude - try to keep some perspective, here. We're just internet nobodies. Discovered any materials with awesome properties that, practically overnight, moved the effort to develop quantum computing forward a decade? No? Then don't be so critical of scientists who did. Sorry if their discovery wasn't world-shaking enough for you. Dismiss it all you want, but then, nobody's reading about your discovery or blowing it up with big words.
To anyone who's actually interested - you can pretty much ignore this arm-chair-physicist's critique. The temperature and scale aren't what's important. The important point is that scientists now have a readily available material that allows a whole host of experiments to be EASILY performed with the potential to teach us what we need to know to move quantum computing out of the single-qubit or two-qubit phase its been stuck for years. The fact that it behaves like a bar magnet means it's highly predictable - that is, controllable - unlike other materials they've mucked about with. So yeah - it might sound like a small discovery, and maybe if one's idea of science is limited to the gooey and biological, it is. Some of us like hard science.
(Man! I never got these weird reactions to groovy science and math on randi.org. First DUers didn't bother reading one article before criticizing it, then this clown decides to dismiss real scientist's discovery with a flood of internet cut-and-paste from their tinfoil hat folder.)