this post was submitted on 21 Aug 2024
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Personally I find quantum computers really impressive, and they havent been given its righteous hype.

I know they won't be something everyone has in their house but it will greatly improve some services.

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[โ€“] xavier666@lemm.ee 0 points 3 months ago (1 children)

What exactly is holding QC back right now? Does it require near room-temp superconductivity to become viable or is it just in research phase right now?

I remember that AI/ML was held back mainly because of compute power to price ratio.

[โ€“] blind3rdeye@lemm.ee 0 points 3 months ago

There are a few different physical systems that people are trying to build quantum computers with. Superconducting loops are one of the most promising ones, because of a halfway decent decoherence rate. And yeah, superconducts needing near 0K temperature to operate is a problem. It's just hard to scale up while everything needs to be so cold. Room-temp superconductivity would be a huge advantage.

But even then, the decoherence rates are still too high for any long quantum computation. Last I heard, the best qubits are maybe barely getting to good enough errors rates that quantum error correction would be possible - which is great, but 'possible' and 'practical' still have a significant gap between them.

So in short, basically everything about the hardware needs to be better; and its just very very hard. Probably too hard to ever achieve the dream of having arbitrary quantum computation. (But there is always the possibility of some big new idea that makes everything work better.)