On Wed, Aug 21, 2019 at 8:06 PM spudboy100 via Everything List <
[email protected]> wrote:

*> Thoughts: Is this Uranium compound radioactive do you think? As in
> hazardous? *
>

It's radioactive but they use depleted Uranium so it's very small, actually
Uranium ore that you dig right out of the ground is more radioactive than
depleted Uranium because the ore contains U235 and far far more radioactive
Polonium and Radium. And besides you don't need much Uranium, just a thin
film.


> > *I believe there has been problems in getting these entanglements in QC
> to successfully attain actual operations. Does this sound right?*
>

Yes, the big problem with Quantum Computers is keeping things entangled and
that's the advantage of encoding the quantum information topologically.
It's the difference between a pencil balanced on its tip and a knot, the
slightest tap will upset the pencil but you have to really work at it to
untie the knot, aka change its topological properties.

*> How many successful operations per sec will QC need to do, before it
> dramatically achieves 'supremacy?'*
>

It depends on how many cycles you need to use for error correction,
topological quantum computers don't need nearly as many. Quantum supremacy
just means finding something, anything, that a real Quantum Computer can do
better than any conventional computer. Even without topology I expect that
will be achieved in the next year, maybe two, it will probably just be a
proof onf concept and the algorithm will not do anything that is actually
useful but it would be a good start.

*> What I am attempting to do to is ascertain impact on society, how much,
> and when?  *
>

Well for one thing it would kill Bitcoin and most forms of encryption that
we use today, but that's peanuts. I think the killer application would be
in physical simulation, even with today's best supercomputers you need to
make big approximations to simulate the simplest quantum interaction. But
we really won't know what we can do with a Quantum Computer until we have
one we can play around with, its like how we were with
conventional computers in the late 1940s

John K Clark

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