| I haven't said a thing about press releases. The paper I linked to (1) doesn't cite Preskill et al and (2) explicitly claims not to be taking shortcuts that don't generalize to numbers other than 15; as well as the bit I quoted earlier, they say "for a demonstration of Shor’s algorithm in a scalable manner, special care must be taken to not oversimplify the implementation—for instance, by employing knowledge about the solution before the actual experimental application" and cite an article in Nature decrying cheaty oversimplifications of Shor's algorithm. I don't see anything in their description of what they do that seems to me to match your talk of "deleting the gates that lead to the wrong answer". (The Kitaev paper they cite also doesn't cite Preskill et al, unsurprisingly since it predates that, and also doesn't contain anything that looks to me like cheaty shortcut-taking.) It is, of course, possible that that paper does take cheaty shortcuts and I've missed them. It is, of course, possible that its authors are flatly lying about what they're doing, and trying to hide the evidence by not citing important prior papers that told them how to do it. If so, perhaps you could show us where. Otherwise, I for one will be concluding from the surfeit of bluster and absence of actual information in your comments so far that you're just assuming that every alleged "factoring of 15" is indulging in the dishonesty you think they are, and that you aren't interested in actually checking. (You don't, indeed, owe anyone anything. It's just that if you want to be taken seriously, that's more likely if you offer something other than sneering and bluster.) |
Pointing this out is apparently necessary; I don't know why it triggers people so to point out that virtually the entire field up to the present day has consisted of grandstanding quasi-frauds. And that you apparently have to understand things and read extremely carefully to notice, because whatever honest workers there may be don't see it as in their interest to point such things out as it may upset their rice bowls.
You have someone else in another thread insisting that annealing can factor giant prime numbers which is equally bullshit. Do you expect me to patiently, precisely and (somehow) dispassionately point out every line of bullshit in every quantum computing paper published? The mere fact that the field is pervasive with bullshit, publishes papers and announcements that are known to be bullshit, and promises all kinds of pixie dust bullshit on a regular basis ought to give you some slight skepticism, some Bayesian prior that the grand pronunciamentos of this clown car should be treated with a bit of skepticism.