Thanks Brady for the comment. I very much agree. Thinking back to the first PC's, there was no graphical input (mouse), only monochrome/non-graphic monitors, no scanners, no connectivity, and very modest compute resources. Sure didn't seem like a very practical tool. But as the machines improved and as the programmers got more and more clever, PC became ubiquitous. I can't wait to see what clever quantum programmers are able to do once they have more powerful Quantum Computers.
Thanks and you bring up an excellent point. We will need to develop quantum memory or the equivalent in order to load the inputs, which is no small feat.
This is helpful, but I can't help but think that once this sector gets going it will be very surprising.
Like, we will have lots of blog posts saying: "We didn't think quantum computers should be able to do X, but they are amazing at it"
Etc etc
Breakthroughs are surprising.
QC feels like a horizon to me.
Thanks Brady for the comment. I very much agree. Thinking back to the first PC's, there was no graphical input (mouse), only monochrome/non-graphic monitors, no scanners, no connectivity, and very modest compute resources. Sure didn't seem like a very practical tool. But as the machines improved and as the programmers got more and more clever, PC became ubiquitous. I can't wait to see what clever quantum programmers are able to do once they have more powerful Quantum Computers.
Thanks and you bring up an excellent point. We will need to develop quantum memory or the equivalent in order to load the inputs, which is no small feat.