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Sunday, November 15, 2015

Microsoft Simulator Brings Quantum Computing One Step Closer to the Masses

#Microsoft will share its #LIQUi|> (no, that’s not a typo) simulator software with the public, so academics can test quantum computing operations on laptops or in the cloud.

On Friday, Microsoft is releasing simulation software that it says will let academics, scientists, or even do-it-yourself eggheads simulate #quantumcomputing on their laptops.

The promise of quantum computing, which breaks the nuts-and-bolts of computing down to the sub-atomic level, is that it can solve problems that go far beyond the capabilities of even today’s most powerful computers.

The current generation of computers represent all data as ones and zeros. It’s all a very binary, on-or-off proposition. By relying on smaller particles, like photons or electrons, a quantum computer would be able to look at data that can hold several contradictory states at the same time. For instance, instead of those ones and zero, a quantum computer would deal with #quantumbits (also known as #qubits), which would accommodate multiple states.

http://fortune.com/2015/11/13/microsoft-quantum-computing-simulator/

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