While everyone’s in a rush to get to the end of the #quantumcomputer race, has anyone really given a moment thought as to who will actually program these machines? The idea of achieving quantum supremacy came after #Google unveiled its new quantum chip design and is all about creating a device that can perform calculation impossible for a conventional computer to carry out.
Quantum computers should have no trouble in outperforming conventional computers as they work on the basis of qubits. Unlike bits that run conventional computers and either a 0 or a 1, qubits can be both at the same time. This is a phenomenon known as superposition. But in order to demonstrate that thousands of qubits would be needed, and right now, that’s just not possible. So instead of Google is planning to compare the computer’s ability to simulate the behavior of a random arrangement of quantum circuits and estimate it will take around 50 qubits to outdo the most powerful of computers.
#IBM is getting ready to release the world’s first commercial universe quantum computing service later this year that will give users the chance to connect to one of its quantum computers via the cloud for a fee. But, there are still many hurdles to overcome before this technology becomes mainstream. One of these problems is that programming a quantum computer is much harder than programming a conventional computer. So, who’s going to program them?
http://trendintech.com/2017/05/16/quantum-computers-sound-great-but-whos-going-to-program-them/
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