figshare
Browse
Quantum Computing.pdf (2.3 MB)

On the Quantum Computing Delusion

Download (66.84 MB)
Version 29 2017-09-23, 07:52
Version 28 2017-09-22, 23:56
Version 27 2017-09-22, 20:12
Version 26 2017-09-22, 20:08
Version 25 2017-09-22, 19:55
Version 24 2017-09-22, 18:44
Version 23 2017-09-22, 18:40
Version 22 2017-09-22, 18:35
Version 21 2017-09-22, 17:17
Version 20 2017-09-22, 17:09
Version 19 2017-09-22, 17:05
Version 18 2017-09-22, 17:01
Version 17 2017-09-22, 16:59
Version 16 2017-09-22, 16:55
Version 15 2017-09-22, 16:50
Version 14 2017-09-22, 16:42
Version 13 2017-09-22, 16:38
Version 12 2017-09-22, 16:35
Version 11 2017-09-22, 16:33
Version 10 2017-09-22, 16:23
journal contribution
posted on 2017-09-23, 07:52 authored by John SmithJohn Smith
The prospect of an up-coming quantum computer revolution is big news these days, with some technologists predicting that a scalable quantum computer is a mere 4 - 5 years away. It has even been claimed -by D-Wave cofounder Eric Ladizinsky- that this prospective revolution will be civilization's next big revolution. The truth is that quantum computers that are anything more than toys are, not merely difficult to engineer, but mathematically impossible, and based on a fundamental misunderstanding of the relationship between classical and quantum physics.

History

Usage metrics

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC