It's a scathing, but also perhaps insightful, analysis of a burgeoning field that, at the very least, still has a lot to prove.Despite billions of dollars being poured into quantum computing, Gourianov argues, the industry has yet to develop a single product that's actuallyThat means these firms are collecting orders of magnitude more in financing than they're able to earn in actual revenue — a growing bubble that could eventually burst.
"The little revenue they generate mostly comes from consulting missions aimed at teaching other companies about 'how quantum computers will help their business,'" Gourianov wrote for the, "as opposed to genuinely harnessing any advantages that quantum computers have over classical computers." Contemporary quantum computers are also "so error-prone that any information one tries to process with them will almost instantly degenerate into noise," he wrote, which scientists have been
ScorpionFund muddywatersre $IONQ
At this point it's a material sciences problem.. the math behind it is sound. How useful will it be vs traditional computing? Idk, it will be able to factor large numbers very quickly.