I wish the tech industry were putting the kind of effort they have to generative AI into quantum compute.
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I wish the tech industry were putting the kind of effort they have to generative AI into quantum compute.
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Kyle Davisreplied to Scott Williams π§ last edited by
@vwbusguy itβs fascinating, but no one has explained to me the broad use cases for it aside from things like better cryptography. Thats an honest question not a criticism.
(And the gen ai use cases are existent but often flimsy, imho)
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@linux_mclinuxface @vwbusguy Well the way I see it Quantum computing in the future iteration can potentially introduce next gen computing technology for us and in order to power such devices, it could trigger the need for more powerful portable batter technology.
Think what Raspberry pi has done for embedded devices industry, hobbyists who build amazing devices with it and the overall momentum for ARM as a desktop platform.
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Scott Williams π§replied to Surya Teja K last edited by [email protected]
@shanmukhateja @linux_mclinuxface Yeah, mainly the potentially to wildly exceed our current thresholds for memory and storage capabilities by exploiting that unlike a transistor that *should* only ever hold one value, a qubit can hold multiple simultaneously.
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Scott Williams π§replied to Scott Williams π§ last edited by [email protected]
@shanmukhateja @linux_mclinuxface In tech, all problems are fundamentally people problems or physics problems. Quantum falls in the latter category, but the need for the tech is driven by and will ultimately be defined by people and their problems.
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Scott Williams π§replied to Scott Williams π§ last edited by
@shanmukhateja @linux_mclinuxface But yes, I see the potential of quantum as similar to what nuclear power plant potential was 70 years ago.