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I have recently been web-researching quantum computing.

Will we see these in our lifetimes (ever?) (The error correction issue, for example, seems intractable to me).

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Error correction is a solved problem, assuming that the error rate is below a (relatively high) threshold -- we can use essentially standard error correcting codes to determine and subtract away the error. – Captain Segfault Feb 14 at 2:27

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Error correction and loss of coherence are the big problems in quantum computing, as I understand it. Lots of smart people are hard at work on solving these problems, but last I read, it was looking like error-correction requirements might be exponential over the number of qbits, which really detracts from the "we'll solve NP problems in an instant!" attraction of quantum computation.

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Quantum computing isn't much past the "idea" stage. Sure, they can multiply two 2-bit integers, but it takes a dozen grad students a week to set up for the run, and another week to validate the results.

Long-term it's probably got a lot of potential, though it may never be stable enough for use outside of a highly controlled lab-based "supercomputer" environment.

At this point I'd classify it more as Physics than Computer Science. In a way, it's as if Charles Babbage got his hands on one of Michael Faraday's papers and started thinking about maybe, possibly, someday, being able to use electromagnetism as a basis for calculation.

There's been a fair amount written about Quantum Computing over the last couple of years in Scientific American, much of it by the primary researchers themselves: http://www.sciam.com

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Nobody will ever need more than 640KB of RAM...

... okay fine. Maybe he didn't say that but you get the idea. :)

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It's already here, just with very limited uses so far.

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Quantum computing is a tool; it's just a tool too raw to have any sort of useful application as of this moment, but who knows.

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I vote: Hype.

...but hope I'm wrong.

Randy

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Why do people sign their posts like a personal letter? lol.. We can see who it is at the bottom of the post ;) – Simucal Nov 20 '08 at 20:37
Well...because it seems more personal. – Randy Stegbauer Nov 25 '08 at 2:13

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