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IBM Develops Quantum Computer

JSC writes: "IBM has developed a quantum computer consisting of five atoms that work as the processor and memory. It's a nice advance of the state of the art...unfortunately, we won't see them on the shelves for about 20 years." Update: 08/15 06:49 PM by H :Check out the official IBM release - thanks to netMonkey for the update.

18 of 180 comments (clear)

  1. Perhaps IBM along with Ziggy... by AntiPasto · · Score: 4
    can finally bring Doctor Samuel Becket home with this new quatum leap computer! ;P

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  2. Key cracking by Mike+Schiraldi · · Score: 3

    This will allow the government to crack 5-bit encryption in fractions of a second! Think of the repercussions for privacy! No longer will the NSA have to brute force their way through the entire keyspace (more than 30 possible keys!)
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  3. 5 Atoms? by pigpogm · · Score: 5

    5 Atoms? We won't see them on the shelve's at all - unless your eyesight's a lot better than mine...

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    PigPog.
  4. Programming Quantum Computers by WinDoze · · Score: 4

    I wonder what's going to happen to us programmers. I had heard a while ago in Scientific American that programming Quamtum Computers required a radically different approach than those used today. I wonder how much different it will be, and how us "old-timers" will deal with it.

    1. Re:Programming Quantum Computers by ikoL · · Score: 3

      I wonder how much different it will be, and how us "old-timers" will deal with it.

      Digital computing won't go away though, as the article mentions, quantum isn't good for many tasks. Most likely they'll come out with hybrid machines, a digital machine calling on the power of the quantum processor when needed. Sorta the way a gas-electric hybrid uses the better engine for a given speed. I'd think that you'd have a digital processor calling on a quantum one when the problem warrants it's power. Digital programmers'll write programs for the digital one and call the "quantum functions" via an API.

      but then again I could be compleatly wrong

      -ikoL

    2. Re:Programming Quantum Computers by MindStalker · · Score: 3

      Accually your more right than you know. As quantum computers solve problems, they can only produce answers that they are some order of mangitude (lets say 95%) confident in the solution. So statistically it should give you the correct answer 95% of the time, the other times the answer will be completly wrong. But thats where traditional computing has its place, as it takes almost no time for a regular processor to check the answer of the quantum processor, and tell it to try again.

  5. Innovations galore! by dbthomas · · Score: 3

    Let's hope that by 2020, when quantum computing hits the market, Intel will be close to rolling out the PXIII and promising that within 5 years they will make the jump out of x86 architecture. Of course, I'm probably being impractical...

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    "These are the days that must happen to you." -Walt Whitman
  6. Predictions by pigpogm · · Score: 5

    PigPog's Law: The number of atoms in a quantum computer will double every 18 months.

    PigPig Gates says: We'll never need more than 640 protons.

    PigPog's Uncertainty Principle: We may know where the computer is or which direction it just blew off the table, but never both at the same time.

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    PigPog.
    1. Re:Predictions by pigpogm · · Score: 3

      Schroedinger's Thinkpad: There is a 50/50 chance that the machine is working or not working each time you open the lid.

      No, wait, that's a Compaq Armada...

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      PigPog.
  7. Yeah but... by Xentax · · Score: 3

    Note that the 3dfx video card is 4 of the 5 atoms, and 2 of the 4 are atomic fans. Otherwise, the whole thing would split from the heat. You thought melting was bad -- imagine your computer going critical and wiping out the city! Dang overclockers....

    Xentax

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    You shouldn't verb words.
  8. Los Alamos has a 7qubit... by griffjon · · Score: 4

    And, in fact, has had a working 7qubit computer since March (2000)...

    This article is an easy read with a GREAT summary of the history, applications, and iswsues in quantum computing: http://www.techreview.com/articles/may00/waldrop.h tm

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    Returned Peace Corps IT Volunteer
  9. More Info by Trinition · · Score: 4
    Quntum computers aren't terribly new, in the technolgoy timeline anyways. There's beena lot fo development on them, both theoretical and real, in the past 20 years.

    For quite some time, it was just a mind game. That was until real algorithms were discovered/invented to take advantage of these curiosities. With powerfully fast algorithms for factoring large integers (the source of encryption's security), searching, etc. they stand poised to change the face of computing. Imagine things such as cracking 1024-bit encyrtption or searching the entire phone-book in one operation.

    Of course, the tricky part is to build one. Since they rely on quantum properties, they are easily bumped into a real state. But this is the source of their power too. If one particle can be in two states, then a string of particles can represent every n-bit binary number combination possible!

    There are several different ways to go about quantum computing. Some use lasers to cool individual atoms to an energy-level where theyt can be controlled reliably. Others use the bulk-effect of quantum states dtected with nuclear magnetic resonance (ironaically, the caffeine molecule prooves to be particulary useful in this setup).

    As of yet, they've been able to do some pretty simple arithmetic with only a few bits of information.

    As for how it will change computing and programming, the best guess I've heard is that there might be quantum coprocessors someday (much like the old math-coprocessors). You see, quantum computers are thus far very good at certain kind of operations and not so good at others. This is very similar to traditional CPUs (which suck at factoring numbers in a reasonable amount of time). The two compliment each other.

    I knew that information I gleaned while writing that college paper on Quantum Computing would come in handy!

    On a similar note, Quantum Encryption is a related field where quantum-entanglement is used to transmit information securely. If someone were to try and eaves-drop on the system the system would collapse into a real state and the information would not be intercepted.

  10. Language for quantum computers by AlpineR · · Score: 5
    While searching for quantum physics simulations, I came across

    A Programming Language for Quantum Computers

    There is also a good, comprehensive website at

    OpenQubit

    but it seems to be in need of a new maintainer.

    My understanding is that quantum computer simulators allow one to mimic the output of a quantum computer, but without the time speed-up that real quantum hardware would provide. So algorithms can be tested out, slowly, even before powerful quantum hardware is developed. I suspect some problems can also be better expressed in a quantum computing language and would therefore be solved more easily even on classical hardware.

    On the subject of simulating quantum physics on classical hardware, in the book The Feynman Processor and in Feynman's own papers it is stated that a classical computer can never perfectly simulate quantum physics. But from the evidence they give it seems merely impractical, not impossible. There can be a huge penalty in the number of steps and time required but no clear reason why a simple quantum physics system could not be perfectly simulated on a powerful classical computer. Anyone have any insight on this problem?

    AlpineR

  11. the classically trained are doomed by Sebastopol · · Score: 5

    Word: If you're between the ages of 14-18, START STUDYING QUANTUM COMPUTING NOW!!!

    Why? Long explanation:

    I read half of a book called Introduction to Quantum Computing (can't remember the author, but I bought it at Siggraph'99 -- there was a huge pile of this book in one booth).

    Anyway, the book is great. It's almost a step-by-step guide to the math behind quantum computing while still maintaining the physical analogy. I got to the part where they discuss Feynman's method for building a quantum adder (which was merely a trivial demonstration of how to get a QM to do a classical computation).

    In chapter 5 or 6, the book starts explaining how to build a Hamiltonion (QM operator function, kinda like a Laplace transfer function H(s)) for the square root of a NOT gate, I realized that anyone who's brain has been fed classical computing concepts based on Turing and Von Neuman is DOOMED to not grok this stuff (or perhaps it's becuase I'm almost 30 and my brain has turned to sand). It's kinda like trying to go from C to LISP.

    So kids, that's why I recommend that you start growing the synapses now. Start growing the synapses that will help you understand this stuff before the patterns of classical computing cure in your young gray matter.

    (Yeah I love how every reporter goes from: "Fascinating new qubit which is 0 and 1 simultaneously because of spin..." to "...so the qubits add all of the numbers at once to find the asnwer in one step". If you can't explain something in a 5th grade english, you don't understand it.)


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    https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
  12. History shows the way... by slothbait · · Score: 4

    I want to calculate solar radiation flux! I want to simulate nuclear detonations! I want to solve the traveling salesman problem for 29 billion routes!

    You know that's exactly the sort of thing that the old Crays were used for. That was back in the day when "supercomputer" meant something, and these beasts only existed in ones and twos in places like Los Alamos, Sandia, and maybe Exxon.

    And back then people thought the exact same things that you are saying now. "Who other than a weapons research lab could possibly use this"? The answer that surprised people is "just about everyone". The Cray-1 may be an inert piece of history now, but it's spirit lives on in our microprocessors. It's not just that modern PC's are as fast as old supercomputers, they are designed like old supercomputers.

    Most innovations in computer architecture in the PC/workstation/server area have been taken from the supercomputers that came before. Surely the original researchers never dreamed that all of the complicated methods they were inventing to speed up supercomputers would wind up running some kid's game -- but they have.

    Modern systems are blazingly fast, yet people continually feel the need to upgrade. In the PC biz, this seems to be driven by games and MS-bloat. Whatever the case, technology marches on, and people are willing to pay for more power. If you have the transistor budget, why not build a supercomputer on a chip? There's a market for it.

    My point (such as it is) is that the hunger for performance shows no sign of stopping. It may seem ridiculous to us that an average person could ever use this much computing power. But bear in mind, that this won't even hit supercomputers for ~20 years. Think what people ~20 years ago would think about the kind of computing power that we use for games today. They would be stunned.

    A little historical perspective, that's all...

    --Lenny

  13. Quantum cryptography beats quantum cryptanalysis by Fervent · · Score: 3
    In The Code Book, they diagram how quantum cryptography is going to easily beat quantum cryptanalysis.

    True, it's easier to break traditional prime-number based ciphers with quantum machines, but there is an effectively unbreakable cipher which can be built off a quantum computer - one that relies off the position of the atoms used as they fly through refractors that "trap" the states, and a system that relies on public-key ideas to keep that atom key a secret.

    They cite quantum money as a potential example (an idea developed in the 1970s). There are some truly mindblowing consequences to an unbreakable cipher.

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    - I don't care if they globalize against free speech. All my best free thoughts are done in my head.

  14. Re:5 Atoms? by bob_jordan · · Score: 5

    Dropping contact lenses is bad enough. Imagine dropping one of these!!!

    "NOBODY MOVE!!!!!"

    Bob.

  15. Re:Why would we EVER see them on shelves? by ErikZ · · Score: 3

    >These are the kinds of problems that quantum computers are geared to compute. Not for playing games, not for doing spreadsheets, and definitely not anything for the store shelves.

    Whew! I'm glad you figured it all out for us. You saved everyone a lot of time and money by letting us know what what we shouldn't be doing with quantum computing.

    Oh, but I think you're wrong on games, I believe you'd be able to program some incredible AI for games like Quake, Or do fantastic universe simulations for games like Elite or privateer.

    You're right about the spreadsheets though, who needs spreadsheets when you have have a quantum computer go though all the possible combinations of funding for a company to come up with the best fiscal plan, in about two seconds.

    And I'd hate to have one of these things on my desktop, I mean, I'd be playing with it all the time, trying to find out new things that could be done with it. Working together with other cutting edge geeks out there...I mean, what's the point?

    Sheesh,
    Erik Z

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    Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.