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by eynsham
768 days ago
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I considered multiple readings of the claim. Obviously different readings may differ in strength. I do not exclude a reading that is neither too strong nor too weak; the comment is an invitation to give one, which you appear to have taken up. I do not see the distinction between what you have written in the second paragraph and the claim that P≠NP. |
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Because it is deterministic, that means it's using a different algorithm than the straightforward nondeterministic solution.
So any Turing machine can solve the problem, but it will have to use the former algorithm. It can't use the latter algorithm.
A lot of people think of quantum computers as basically a nondeterministic Turing machine, and the wording in the parent post is an attempt to correct that misconception.