would you buy a quantum computer if it required a bank loan?



would you write a program for a quantum computer because nobody else has the courage?

3d molecular computing

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The Future Is Quantum





I like the word quantum. It’s a very future sounding word. Fantasy writer Terry Pratchett likes it too, and uses it in his novels to describe anything that can’t really be described or understood. Considering his stories take place on a world that drifts through space balanced on 4 giant elephants standing on a turtle, it’s a word he uses fairly often.

Quantum is like a bridge between what’s possible and what’s probable. It makes science fiction science fact, and it’s here. Well, almost here. The issue of quantum computing has been puzzling researchers for roughly 3 decades, and now it looks like we’re only a few short years away from buying them from our local tech stores.

What’s the big deal with quantum computers anyway? Well, they’re super-fast and super-efficient, making current PCs look like the monstrous machines that took up an entire room when they were first developed. According to Fred Chong, from the University to California, a quantum computer would be able to solve in mere months problems that would take a conventional computer millions of years.

The key to their “superness” is the fact that quantum bits or qubits are not bound by the conventions of time and space as we know them. Normal electrons spin either clockwise or anti-clockwise. Quantum electrons spin in both directions at once. This ability to transcend a single state of existence means that when they’re used in computing, quantum electrons transform conventional “bits” into qubits. Conventional bits can be either a 1 or a 0, but qubits can be both at the same time.

In quantum mechanical terms, the qubits exist in superposition, which leads to an inherent parallelism, which according to physicist David Deutsch allows quantum computers to work on a million computations at once. Current PCs can work on only one.

One of the most important benefits of quantum computers, aside from all the other “superness”, is that they’ll make silicon based microchips obsolete. This is a good thing because within about 4 years silicon chips will have evolved themselves out of existence, being too small to be of any practical use.

One of the ways in which they’ll negate silicon chips, and completely revolutionise the way computers are wired, is through the quantum property of teleportation. Using teleportation, information about one particle will be transmitted to another without using any wires at all. In Star Trek terms, information is beamed from one particle to another. The nice thing about quantum is that there will always be enough power to do this. No flailing about in outer space, panicking about another Klingon attack for these babies. You’re always good to go.

Simple quantum computers are already in existence, but they’re nowhere near achieving what they’re capable of. In 2007, a Canadian company, D-Wave, created a 16-qubit (the goal is at least 30 qubits) quantum computer that could solve sudoku puzzles. Other quantum computers can solve the riddle of Schrodinger’s cat (a cat in a box with poison, is it alive or dead? Until you open the box and have a look, it occupies both states, not unlike quantum electrons and qubits), considered one of the most important equations in quantum mechanics.

It may not seem like much to the man/woman on the street, but it’s enough to get quantum physicists out of their baths and running naked down the street with cries of “Eureka”.

Recommended sites:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/070614104042.htm

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/09/010913074828.htm

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/01/060119230847.htm

http://computer.howstuffworks.com/quantum-computer.htm

3-d internet

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Quantum Computer Running Another App



This is the second of three applications that D:Wave demonstrated at the Computer History Museum.

Real Time Internet

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QUANTUM COMPUTER is the end of the world?



The basic model of Quantum Computer is being completed in 10 years from now which would make all the secret data transfer system meaningless in Internet. This is not a topic of dream world. some basic algorythm and architecture’s text books are already published as well as the fact that 7 bits of calculation of 15 = 3 x 5 is achieved in IBM lab. You also can download QT computer simulation software from www.senko-corp.co.jp/qcs/ja/
My concerning is, what will happen when Muslim terrorists get this technology before U.S. gov has completed the development project in these 10 years?
Even the secret data transfering system could be easily solved in less 1 hour and they could easily get all the top secrets about all the defense system on Pentagon data base.

3d virtual environments
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