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by tiziano88
4837 days ago
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I think they only do adiabatic quantum computing, which is not what most of the people mean when speaking about quantum computing (it does not involve entanglement, only quantum annealing).
Edit: Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_annealing |
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However, in 'true' QC, there is something very physically different happening; we expect to see universal superposition of Hamiltonian states (entangled vector bases), which allows for some remarkable parallelism in a gate architecture that mirrors programmable (classic) computers. Specifically, we would be able to perform an operation on 2^N different numbers with just one calculation, while in classical computing such a computation would actually require 2^N separate (sequential) iterations. DWave systems, although it has produced some evidence of engtanglement, could not achieve anything on this magnitude of computational efficiency/parallelism. Footnote: as promising as the big picture of recombining said superpositions and 'hacking the multiverse' (a la Deutsche) is, fragility & decoherence of said states is an extraordinary barrier to overcome in order to achieve a 'true' QC in the near term or even medium term (as some critics as Wolfram would argue)...