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by mlyle
2431 days ago
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Eh, I haven't really heard them. I'm 40 and have followed this from near the beginning (starting with reading Science News in the late 80's-- even then the criticism was pretty muted). I am not positive we are going to get quantum computers with error correction on boolean qubits that can do all the meaningful tasks we hope quantum computers can do. I think it's more likely than not, but it is not close to happening and may never happen. I am not even 100% certain (but it is very very likely) that it is physically realizable. In my view, this current milestone is kind of contrived. And even if we do, it's not clear what subset of tasks currently performed on classical computers will be superseded by quantum computation. That's perhaps one of the biggest problems: normal computing has had a whole lot of use cases to pay the research and capital costs. |
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I am involved on the theory side of the implementation of different kinds of solid state qubits, so you may say I'm biased, but the question really isn't whether we will ever get it or not, the question is when. We already have had exponential growth in single qubit coherence times in the past decade, we have very good entangling gates, and there isn't any fundamental reason why the number of qubits can't be increased. It's not like there is an invisible great barrier ahead of us, and nothing in the physics of these devices say we can't.
By the way, they aren't using quantum error correction methods right now, basically because it's not worth it: you need a lot of physical qubits to encode a high quality logical qubits.