|
|
|
|
|
by krastanov
1464 days ago
|
|
Could you elaborate on your last paragraph? Proof of concepts that can not solve "useful" problems seem like an incredibly important milestones to me? Or is your frustration that they are occasionally presented by overly enthusiastic engineers as more than "useless" technology demonstrators (with this frustration I would agree). The second half of the article I shared covers the parametrization question you raised. |
|
A successful technology does not need to show theoretical supremacy. Its proponents can simply show the useful services and products it makes.
> Proof of concepts that can not solve "useful" problems seem like an incredibly important milestones to me?
Sure, just don't claim supremacy until you can back it up with an actually reasonable definition of computation.
> Or is your frustration that they are occasionally presented by overly enthusiastic engineers as more than "useless" technology demonstrators (with this frustration I would agree).
It is hard to find any news about quantum computing that is not way over exaggerated.
> The second half of the article I shared covers the parametrization question you raised.
His argument may apply to the teapot example, but for, say, a test flight to fine tune the auto pilot behavior, there are plenty of inputs that can be set. I'd argue the aerodynamic computer supremacy example still stands.