Comment by g42gregory
15 hours ago
Do we have an example of a real quantum computer doing some kind of a computation that is not easily accessible by the regular computer?
I keep hearing about "the promise" and "achieving quantum supremacy" (again!), but is there a real example of a quantum machine doing something useful in real life?
> Do we have an example of a real quantum computer doing some kind of a computation that is not easily accessible by the regular computer?
Simulations of condensed matter simulations performed on QCs (google's OTOCs, quantinuum's HUbbard model) are not easily accessible by the regular computer. There are people working hard on simulating these results classically so it's quite likely they'll be simulated eventually. We're at point where classical computers are still in the race thanks to immense scale and algorithmic progress, but I think it won't be the case soon.
> something useful in real life?
usefulness is subjective. There are results that are potentially interesting to some people on Earth (as opposed to RCS).
No, there are none; the closest we currently have are various special purpose and more or less hard-coded machines that demonstrate that scaling exists; various general-purpose machines operating on handfuls of qubits demonstrating the various gates; and various snake oil scams that may or may not have semi-respectable research divisions associated with them.
Interesting, do you work in that field?
The Venn diagram of "useful" and "not possible on a classical computer" has demonstrations on both disjoint ends but is currently empty in the intersection. For now. I fully sympathize with the hype-fatigue though.
What about Schor’s algorithm?
On the one hand you have strong and persistent claims about quantum factoring of large numbers
On the other hand you have
https://algassert.com/post/2500
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That's on the useful end but I don't think any QC has gone beyond being able to factor 14 or something in that neighborhood. Realistically we'd need a few thousand qubits to factor anything that's reasonable and current QCs have a dozen or so qubits that work.
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https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg26735582-700-how-a-we...
No. It's as if there's a "No computing with this shit" theorem, enforced by nature alongside "No FTL communications," "No hidden variables," "No, you can't build a transporter, not yours," and "No cloning."