What we need are not the algorithms, but the ice-cold machinery, coupled with 
AI to make the quantum leap technologically. Quantum computing is said to kick 
large errors along with faster processing. 

Breakthrough in quantum error correction could lead to large-scale quantum 
computers
https://physicsworld.com/a/breakthrough-in-quantum-error-correction-could-lead-to-large-scale-quantum-computers/#:~:text=For%20practical%20large%2Dscale%20quantum,which%20is%20a%20big%20challenge.

If You Think AI Is Hot, Wait Until It Meets Quantum Computing
https://www.forbes.com/sites/sap/2023/03/21/if-you-think-ai-is-hot-wait-until-it-meets-quantum-computing/?sh=6b3e8c711ff6

And always the big, BOO! of course!
https://nypost.com/2023/04/12/how-quantum-computing-will-speed-up-the-age-of-ai/

Here's a thought for JC. What IF we soon, have server farms of quantum 
computers loaded with AI? All that cold, all that electrical power required, 
not bloody likely! But if, and your New Testament is accurate? Jesus then 
"descends from the clouds," meaning, cloud computing. Then, via QC+ AI & The 
Resurrection happens? 
Whatd'ya say?
Me Luv Quantum Woo! (I really do!). woo-woo-woo-woo!! -Curley Joe, Stooge. 



-----Original Message-----
From: John Clark <johnkcl...@gmail.com>
To: everything-list@googlegroups.com
Sent: Mon, May 15, 2023 7:21 am
Subject: Re: Physicists create virtual nonabelions for fault-tolerant quantum 
computers Inbox

On Sun, May 14, 2023 at 3:18 PM Brent Meeker <meekerbr...@gmail.com> wrote:


 
>>ME: Any calculation involving quantum mechanics could be done billions or 
>>trillions of times faster on a quantum computer. It's easy to calculate the 
>>light spectrum of hydrogen, the simplest element, but doing the same thing 
>>for helium the second simplest , requires months of calculations on the 
>>largest supercomputer on earth, and the sun will turn into a red giant before 
>>such a computer could calculate the spectrum of one of the heavier elements. 
>>And trying to figure out what spectrum molecules will produce is even more 
>>difficult.
 
 > Yes, some things are faster to measure than to calculate.  And I note that 
 > recently a classical algorithm was found for folding of proteins (which was 
 > formerly touted as THE application for quantum computation): 

True. We have quantum algorithms that can solve problems much faster than any 
known classical algorithm, however nobody has been able to prove that there is 
not a classical algorithm that can solve any problem just as fast as the 
quantum variety that we just haven't found yet. The reason we haven't been able 
to prove that is because nobody has been able to prove that P≠ NP even though 
nearly every mathematician alive believes that nondeterministic polynomial 
problems (problems that are hard to calculate but easy to check) can NOT be 
solved in polynomial time (problems with N elements in which the time required 
to solve increases as N gets larger as X^N, not  N^X). The P=NP question is 
perhaps the greatest unsolved problem in all of mathematics; if despite 
everybody's expectations it turns out that P really is equal to NP and if the 
algorithm could be found then it's true, you wouldn't need quantum computers, 
the conventional variety would work just as well. I could be wrong but I don't 
expect that to happen.  

 John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
yum


 w3x
  
  
    
  
 Brent
 
 On 5/13/2023 2:58 PM, John Clark wrote:
  
   On Sat, May 13, 2023 at 5:14 PM Lawrence Crowell 
<goldenfieldquaterni...@gmail.com> wrote:
    
    
> Curious, for a part of my discussions with GPT-4 involve the relationship 
> between anyons and a lattice form of supersymmetry. Nonabelions can then act 
> as a sort of supersymmetric protection of quantum states.
    If this can be made practical then this new development will be a very big 
deal, in fact about as big a deal as deals get. And as far as I can tell there 
are no scientific roadblocks, just engineering difficulties. They're virtual 2D 
Nonabelions not real ones but as far as making a topological quantum computer 
is concerned that distinction is not very important. John K Clark    See what's 
on my new list at  Extropolis naa
  
  
 
 
   On Wednesday, May 10, 2023 at 1:58:03 PM UTC-5 John Clark wrote:
  
   As if all the news about GPT-4 were not enough, this is an article from the 
journal Nature that that went online yesterday: 
  
  Physicists create virtual nonabelions for fault-tolerant quantum computers
  
  It's about a preprint that just went online; they claim "unambiguous 
realization of non-Abelian topological order and demonstrate control over 
them". Technically they're virtual Anyons not real ones, but from the 
perspective of an engineer trying to make a Fault Tolerant Quantum Computer the 
difference between real and virtual is not important:  
  Creation of Non-Abelian Topological Order and Anyons on a Trapped-Ion 
Processor
  
  
  











  
  




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