• over_clox@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    Well riddle me this, if a computer of any sort has to constantly keep correcting itself, whether in processing or memory, well doesn’t that seem unreliable to you?

    Hell, with quantum computers, if the temperature ain’t right and you fart in the wrong direction, the computations get corrupted. Even when you introduce error correction, if it only lasts an hour, that still doesn’t sound very reliable to me.

    On the other hand, I have ECC ChipKill RAM in my computer, I can literally destroy a memory chip while the computer is still running, and the system is literally designed to keep running with no memory corruption as if nothing happened.

    That sort of RAM ain’t exactly cheap either, but it’s way cheaper than a super expensive quantum computer with still unreliable memory.

    • WolfLink@sh.itjust.works
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      17 days ago

      Well riddle me this, if a computer of any sort has to constantly keep correcting itself, whether in processing or memory, well doesn’t that seem unreliable to you?

      Error correction is the study of the mathematical techniques that let you make something reliable out of something unreliable. Much of classical computing heavily relies on error correction. You even pointed out error correction applied in your classical computer.

      That sort of RAM ain’t exactly cheap either, but it’s way cheaper than a super expensive quantum computer with still unreliable memory.

      The reason so much money is being invested in the development of quantum computers is mathematical work that suggests a sufficiently big enough quantum computer will be able to solve useful problems in an hour that would take the worlds biggest classical computer thousands of years to solve.

      • over_clox@lemmy.world
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        17 days ago

        Why do we humans even think we need to solve these extravagantly over-complicated formulas in the first place? Shit, we’re in a world today where kids are forgetting how to spell and do basic math on their own, no thanks to modern technology.

        Don’t get me wrong, human curiosity is an amazing thing. But that’s a two edged sword, especially when we’re augmenting genuine human intelligence with the processing power of modern technology and algorithms.

        Just because we can, doesn’t necessarily mean we should. We’re gonna end up with a new generation of kids growing up half dumb as a stump, expecting the computers to give us all the right answers.

        Smart technology for dumb people…

        • WolfLink@sh.itjust.works
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          17 days ago

          Why do we humans even think we need to solve these extravagantly over-complicated formulas in the first place? Shit, we’re in a world today where kids are forgetting how to spell and do basic math on their own, no thanks to modern technology.

          lol.

          All of modern technology boils down to math. Curing diseases, building our buildings, roads, cars, even how we do farming these days is all heavily driven by science and math.

          Sure, some of modern technology has made people lazy or had other negative impacts, but it’s not a serious argument to say continuing math and science research in general is worthless.

          Specifically relating to quantum computing, the first real problems to be solved by quantum computers are likely to be chemistry simulations which can have impact in discovering new medicines or new industrial processes.

          • scarabic@lemmy.world
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            17 days ago

            Your responses to Herr Dunning-Kruger here were very patient and succinct. I learned from them so thanks for making that effort.

        • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          17 days ago

          Why do we humans even think we need to solve these extravagantly over-complicated formulas in the first place?

          Because those questions could do things like cure disease or help us better understand the universe or a million other things

          Shit, we’re in a world today where kids are forgetting how to spell and do basic math on their own, no thanks to modern technology.

          Not because of it, either. This research isn’t really related to that kind of tech, either

          Just because we can, doesn’t necessarily mean we should. We’re gonna end up with a new generation of kids growing up half dumb as a stump, expecting the computers to give us all the right answers.

          This isn’t going to be for daily normal use, you’re projecting fear at the wrong tech

          • over_clox@lemmy.world
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            17 days ago

            Ask a quantum chip how to cure a disease? Sure, let’s accept that as a possible future…

            You really think the chips actually understand diseases? We’re gonna end up with a whole new generation of people that have no clue how the shit works to begin with.

            Eventually it’ll be like “How do I trim my toenails?”, while the ‘intelligent’ system responds to cut your appendages off.

            Granted that AI and quantum computing aren’t quite the same thing. Does it matter? Future generations will have the ability to just ask a computer how to generate cure a disease…

            The machine gives no fucks about us, it’ll just as easily destroy us if someone asks the wrong question or enters the wrong formula.

            • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              16 days ago

              Ask a quantum chip how to cure a disease?

              No, that’s not how that works at all

              You really think the chips actually understand diseases?

              Nope

              We’re gonna end up with a whole new generation of people that have no clue how the shit works to begin with.

              Projecting? Its very clear you have no idea how this stuff works, that’s for sure

              Granted that AI and quantum computing aren’t quite the same thing

              They aren’t the same at all

              Future generations will have the ability to just ask a computer how to generate cure a disease

              Almost certainly an impossibility