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128 points sebgan | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.408s | source
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wasabi991011 ◴[] No.44539574[source]
Yeah there's a reason that the quantum computing field has moved away from attempting factorisations. Not that there's not still hype and misleading claims being punished, but the hardware has improved a ton since 2001 and ever closer to actual useful quantum computation (such as large size quantum chemistry calculations).
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thrance ◴[] No.44541356[source]
Are those useful computations in the room with us right now? No, but seriously, I feel like factorization is the one application that could justify those massive investments QC is receiving (even though it would probably make the world strictly worse...).

All those other applications, no matter how neat, I feel are quite niche. Like, "simulate pairs of electrons in the Ising model". Cool. Is that a multi-billion dollars industry though?

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upofadown ◴[] No.44542282[source]
Factorization could have number theory implications I suppose. Using quantum effects to break cryptography wouldn't have any real long term advantages unless you aspired to be some sort of a supervillain.
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1. LeftHandPath ◴[] No.44542328[source]
> Using quantum effects to break cryptography wouldn't have any real long term advantages unless you aspired to be some sort of a supervillain.

It's of interest to governments, for national security reasons. Quantum computing is an arms race.