Do you believe we have obtained full quantum in hidden labs?
I'm in cyber so I follow quantum computing to a degree. But based on everything I know so far the technology still has a long way to go and traditional computing is still faster.
I think they slow rolling AI out right now. If you think about it dedicated chips, different architectures made for AI could be way better than some GPU clusters.
I very much doubt it. The algorithms aren't there. The engineering to build the hardware to read the wind isn't there for Rube Goldberg quantum machines nor Turing complete finite state qbit solutions.
What wouldn't surprise me is prototype hardware that allows binary computers to access hardware that acts as a GPU (QPU) with 3 to 8 states per bit and sufficient parity that exceeds what academic labs are doing. It might be physically huge and full of kludgy coding and engineering and sloppy but statistically accurate enough algorithms to get a lot of hardware running in parallel. Not at all in a reasonable state to trickle down to private industry and full of dead ends but still doing things that were impossible 5 years ago.
Do you believe we have obtained full quantum in hidden labs?
I'm in cyber so I follow quantum computing to a degree. But based on everything I know so far the technology still has a long way to go and traditional computing is still faster.
I think they slow rolling AI out right now. If you think about it dedicated chips, different architectures made for AI could be way better than some GPU clusters.
Considering (it's estimated) that U.S. military black programs are 50-80 yrs ahead of general pop access
Yeah man. Don’t need to engineer it if you already recover it from a crashed craft.
What we're allowed to see is often lagging behind. Wireless communication was being tested in 1895.
I very much doubt it. The algorithms aren't there. The engineering to build the hardware to read the wind isn't there for Rube Goldberg quantum machines nor Turing complete finite state qbit solutions.
What wouldn't surprise me is prototype hardware that allows binary computers to access hardware that acts as a GPU (QPU) with 3 to 8 states per bit and sufficient parity that exceeds what academic labs are doing. It might be physically huge and full of kludgy coding and engineering and sloppy but statistically accurate enough algorithms to get a lot of hardware running in parallel. Not at all in a reasonable state to trickle down to private industry and full of dead ends but still doing things that were impossible 5 years ago.
Yes. NSF is spearheading the charge. They are the next DARPA - AI, Quantum, Antarctica, etc.