quantum computing sounds pretty cool tbh fam

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I can barely do regular computing, that sounds terrifying.


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I can barely do regular computing, that sounds terrifying.
im writing a page-long essay about it now and my head is exploding


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My discrete math class nearly got our professor to drop the lecture he was giving us and tell us how a quantum computer works.


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My discrete math class nearly got our professor to drop the lecture he was giving us and tell us how a quantum computer works.
had a lecture on it last week for my Origins of Computer Science class. pretty interesting stuff


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I have trouble wrapping my head around the qubit. On or off I get, but 4 states?


big dog | Mythic Inconceivable!
 
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I have trouble wrapping my head around the qubit. On or off I get, but 4 states?
Basically, classical computers represent data as bits, which can either be 1 or 0. In quantum computers, we use qubits, which can be both 1 and 0 simultaneously. The problem quantum computing faces is that if a system is disrupted by the "outside world", it loses its quantumness, and as computers kinda require interaction with the outside world, that makes it difficult to build a quantum computer.


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I have trouble wrapping my head around the qubit. On or off I get, but 4 states?
Basically, classical computers represent data as bits, which can either be 1 or 0. In quantum computers, we use qubits, which can be both 1 and 0 simultaneously. The problem quantum computing faces is that if a system is disrupted by the "outside world", it loses its quantumness, and as computers kinda require interaction with the outside world, that makes it difficult to build a quantum computer.

Yeah, I get it uses the 4 state qubit, I just don't see what we could do with it. Like a guy sitting on a horse in the old west contemplating low Earth orbit satellites.

As far as the whole quantum gobblygook goes... I'll take your word for it


 
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I have trouble wrapping my head around the qubit. On or off I get, but 4 states?
Basically, classical computers represent data as bits, which can either be 1 or 0. In quantum computers, we use qubits, which can be both 1 and 0 simultaneously. The problem quantum computing faces is that if a system is disrupted by the "outside world", it loses its quantumness, and as computers kinda require interaction with the outside world, that makes it difficult to build a quantum computer.

Yeah, I get it uses the 4 state qubit, I just don't see what we could do with it. Like a guy sitting on a horse in the old west contemplating low Earth orbit satellites.

As far as the whole quantum gobblygook goes... I'll take your word for it
well ive heard it can be useful for encrypting information and making it leagues harder to crack, but i dont know about that fully


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I love you, son.
I have trouble wrapping my head around the qubit. On or off I get, but 4 states?
Basically, classical computers represent data as bits, which can either be 1 or 0. In quantum computers, we use qubits, which can be both 1 and 0 simultaneously. The problem quantum computing faces is that if a system is disrupted by the "outside world", it loses its quantumness, and as computers kinda require interaction with the outside world, that makes it difficult to build a quantum computer.

Yeah, I get it uses the 4 state qubit, I just don't see what we could do with it. Like a guy sitting on a horse in the old west contemplating low Earth orbit satellites.

As far as the whole quantum gobblygook goes... I'll take your word for it
Quantum computers can solve problems faster than classical supercomputers. Quantum computers would be really useful in medicine to analyse proteins and shit so we can make better medicines. Also quantum computing has use in weather forecasting to make super accurate predictions and also artificial intelligence.
A potential problem with it is that the current method of encryption we use for electronic services would be rendered useless against quantum computers. So we need to develop some new encryption algorithms that are secure against quantum computers.


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NEEERRRRDDDDDD


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To say, 'nothing is true', is to realize that the foundations of society are fragile, and that we must be the shepherds of our own civilization. To say, 'everything is permitted', is to understand that we are the architects of our actions, and that we must live with their consequences, whether glorious or tragic.
I have trouble wrapping my head around the qubit. On or off I get, but 4 states?
Basically, classical computers represent data as bits, which can either be 1 or 0. In quantum computers, we use qubits, which can be both 1 and 0 simultaneously. The problem quantum computing faces is that if a system is disrupted by the "outside world", it loses its quantumness, and as computers kinda require interaction with the outside world, that makes it difficult to build a quantum computer.

Yeah, I get it uses the 4 state qubit, I just don't see what we could do with it. Like a guy sitting on a horse in the old west contemplating low Earth orbit satellites.

As far as the whole quantum gobblygook goes... I'll take your word for it
Quantum computers can solve problems faster than classical supercomputers. Quantum computers would be really useful in medicine to analyse proteins and shit so we can make better medicines. Also quantum computing has use in weather forecasting to make super accurate predictions and also artificial intelligence.
A potential problem with it is that the current method of encryption we use for electronic services would be rendered useless against quantum computers. So we need to develop some new encryption algorithms that are secure against quantum computers.
So, how does the 0 and 1 simultaneously thing make it able to process information quicker?


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big dog | Mythic Inconceivable!
 
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I love you, son.
I have trouble wrapping my head around the qubit. On or off I get, but 4 states?
Basically, classical computers represent data as bits, which can either be 1 or 0. In quantum computers, we use qubits, which can be both 1 and 0 simultaneously. The problem quantum computing faces is that if a system is disrupted by the "outside world", it loses its quantumness, and as computers kinda require interaction with the outside world, that makes it difficult to build a quantum computer.

Yeah, I get it uses the 4 state qubit, I just don't see what we could do with it. Like a guy sitting on a horse in the old west contemplating low Earth orbit satellites.

As far as the whole quantum gobblygook goes... I'll take your word for it
Quantum computers can solve problems faster than classical supercomputers. Quantum computers would be really useful in medicine to analyse proteins and shit so we can make better medicines. Also quantum computing has use in weather forecasting to make super accurate predictions and also artificial intelligence.
A potential problem with it is that the current method of encryption we use for electronic services would be rendered useless against quantum computers. So we need to develop some new encryption algorithms that are secure against quantum computers.
So, how does the 0 and 1 simultaneously thing make it able to process information quicker?
Okay... I'll attempt to explain this.

Due to the nature of classical computers, they can only do one thing at a time. If I have a complex problem requiring millions of different equations to solve, it's going to take a while as bits can only be in one state at a time.

With a quantum computer of n qubits, however, I can have 2^n states, and so quantum computers can answer far more questions at a time, and so I can solve the problem using less operations.

Kinda iffy explanation but the actual how of it all is what computer scientists are trying to figure it out.
Last Edit: December 01, 2015, 02:36:09 PM by Fedorekd™


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To say, 'nothing is true', is to realize that the foundations of society are fragile, and that we must be the shepherds of our own civilization. To say, 'everything is permitted', is to understand that we are the architects of our actions, and that we must live with their consequences, whether glorious or tragic.
YouTube

Do you have one of these for everything related to computers?


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Do you have one of these for everything related to computers?
What


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but muh ones


muh zeros


big dog | Mythic Inconceivable!
 
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Yeah it's kind of a tricky concept. Also need to be careful how you define a quantum computer in comparison to a classical one. That video make me realise a slight mistake on my essay with regards to how quantum computers perform.


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I'm wrapping up a graduate course on it this semester!

They're not an end-all solution and they actually perform worse in some use cases then classical computers do, but the algorithms used are almost magical they're so unlike those used in classical computing.

When it comes to qubits, a single qubit does NOT store one of four potential states. It only technically represents two states, the usual 0 and 1 (using Dirac/bra-ket notation, |0> and |1>), but the ability to put a qubit in a superposition is where the whole "both" thing comes from, which I personally find misleading. Basically, many quantum algorithms designed around gate computers start off with a Hadamard transformation which sets a qubit or set of qubits in an equal weighted superposition between |0> and |1>. At that point, if you measure any of them there's a 50/50 chance of getting either result. After they are superimposed, you can perform a function you are interested in/other operations on them and it effectively is equivalent to performing that operation on all the possible values that those qubits can occupy at once. Well, until you measure them. But that massive parallelization is where the power lies.

Most of the notable algorithms don't go straight for an answer in a usual computational sense. Usually they exploit relationships between the outcomes. It's pretty weird, half the time the answer you're looking for is produced in the input register rather than the output register.

It's so complicated though, I couldn't adequately express it in layman's terms if I tried. And that's in spite of the fact that the math is really pretty simple; you really only need basic calculus and linear algebra for the early quantum algorithms (i.e. up to the 1990s and 2000s). Check out Deutsch's, Simon's, Shor's, and Grover's problems/algorithms if you want real examples.


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And right now, D-Wave Systems' machines, which are referred to as quantum computers, are a bit different from what you might expect. They really only perform one type of operation (albeit with great scaling and very well): annealing. So right now these quantum annealers are outpacing billion-dollar engineering firms on certain problems (like municipal water line layout), but they aren't universal quantum computers.

Gate quantum computers, which would be able to perform any quantum algorithm you feel like programming for them, are not as well developed currently because keeping them in a superposition (eliminating environmental noise that would cause collapse of the qubits' superposition) at a scale like what we have classically is just really hard right now.