RIP Charlie Kirk you would have loved China’s first photonic quantum computer factory
How many horsepowers does it have, jack?
Them Chaanees bilt a quannum campootah and alls it does is break ground? Pfft I coulda dun dat with a shovel
quantum computing is still in its very early infancy, literally NOTHING about it is stable yet. we can barely get them to run a dijkstra’s algorithm, let alone anything actually useful. if you don’t keep the processor cool enough it’ll just kill itself, and we’re already trying to mass produce them? putting that aside, quantum computers have a very small use case. most things it does, a classical computer can do better. who is the target userbase for this? the very saturated market of theoretical quantum physicists? i am very skeptical of this man
Better to over-invest into quantum computers than under-invest into them.
Plus, technological development bears fruit on the timespan of decades.
field has promise but for the next few years it’s not gonna have much use, can’t wait for quantum cybersec to become a thing tho
I read something about them being able to crack encryption once they’re powerful enough? This was years ago tho
still true but setting quantum computers up is a pain in the ass
if I heard about them right, the appeal of photonic ones is they’re room temp
second point still stands, but damn they’ve made a room temp quantum computer? we might be making advances for once.
Western game developers: we’re gonna make this the minimal requirements for our next shooter
I wish they said more about what they will be able to do with those computers.
I guess we’ll see what happens once they start applying them.
Broadly speaking, we’ll see exponential advances in simulation/modelling capacity especially related to medicine/industry. Possible advances in space exploration (think: newly discovered materials, energy efficiency). State actors will use quantum computing to crack modern encryption as one of the earliest applications.
I think it’s way too early to talk about any of that, a lot of the stuff quantum computing promises is still only theoretical and so far there hasn’t been a single “real” quantum computer that behaves is it does in the theory.
IBM’s roadmap is pretty aggressive, with users projected to start running “large-scale quantum-centric problems by 2029”
With respect to theory, Google’s 105-qubit Willow processor performed a benchmark task in 5 minutes that would take the world’s fastest classical supercomputers 10 septillion years to complete.
I’m not sure this stuff is as theoretical or distant as it might feel.
If LLMs are any indication they can do a bunch of crap really poorly but most importantly make the line go up