|
|
|
|
|
by reportgunner
2428 days ago
|
|
We can keep moving the goalposts and I can rephrase my claim to: > it's a state when a quantum computer can achieve results that would require more operations on a binary computer than a binary computer has proven to be able to do but the point will still stand. We can't say we achieved quantum supremacy for this one thing because binary computers still have supremacy over everyting else. I guess we can agree here that quantum supremacy was definitely not achieved since we are not clear on the definition of said quantum supremacy. |
|