The D - Wave computer, marketed as a groundbreaking quantum machine that runs circles
around conventional computers, solves problems no faster than an ordinary rival, a new test shows.
Not exact matches
«One way to know is by understanding how electrons move
around in these materials so we can develop new ways of manipulating them — for example, with light instead of electrical current as
conventional computers do.»
A team led by Shree K. Nayar, T.C. Chang Professor of
Computer Science at Columbia Engineering, has developed a novel sheet camera that can be wrapped
around everyday objects to capture images that can not be taken with one or more
conventional cameras.
But because electron spins offer one of the most promising models for quantum bitsphysical states that can store far more information than
conventional computer bitsscientists have sought ways
around the coherence problem.