Forty two? How about this. If you drill a hole from any point on the earth, through to any other point on the earth, and disregard friction, only use acceleration and decceleration due to gravity, the amount of time it takes to get from any arbitrary point to any other arbitrary point is almost exactly 42 minutes.
Back on topic, while what LordZorinthrhox said is entirely true, there is one glaring omission. While in his explanation he deals entirely with fundamental particles, the line between Einsteinian physics and Quantum physics isn't as clearly cut. In the quantum processor, for example, the quantum objects that hold multiple states aren't individual fundamental particles, but a small clump of aluminium atoms. Still frighteningly small, but far larger than a fundamental particle. Hundreds of times larger, even. But they behave in the same way.
Ever hear of the two-slit experiment? Where they fire electrons or photons through a (figurative) wall with two slits in it, one at a time at a sheet of photograph paper. The resulting pattern isn't the expected two lines of light next to each other, but an interference pattern that would be expected only if the individual particles, photons or electrons, were waves of energy, rather than individual point particles. In reality, they move as waves of probable positions. The particle moves through both slits at once, and interacts with itself, interferes with itself.
However, if you put up a sensor in front of the slits to determine which slit it actually goes through, then the interference pattern vanishes, and you get two straight parallel lines... This gets even creepier, however. If you put the sensor behind the slits, even very close to the photograph paper, after the probability wave would have interacted with itself and caused the pattern, the particle retroactively chooses which slit it went through, and two parallel lines show up.
Now to make it even worse: It works with objects as large as
a Fullerene, or more solidly, the small balls of aluminium in the quantum processor.