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"The current record for the most fault-tolerant qubits in a single device is 1."

Can you comment on Google's[1] and IBM's[2] announcements of 70 and 433 qubit quantum computers?

Is this just marketing hype? Are the qubits not fault tolerant? Is fault tolerance really necessary to get useful results?

[1] - https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2023/07/02/google-quant...

[2] - https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/05/25/1073606/ibm-want...




That's why I emphasized one _logical_ qubit. I'll definitely argue that fault tolerance is necessary to achieve useful results, as you say, but there is some argument in the research community on that. Even setting that discussion aside, there's absolutely no way to run something like LLM training dirctly on physical qubits (unless there was an improvement in error rates that's probably on the order of 10^15 to 10^18), even if you had both enough to do so and had a good qRAM implementation.


What do you think of

> In some of its applications, the original > Zeng-Coecke algorithm relies on the existence of a quantum random access memory (QRAM) [22], > which is not yet known to be efficiently implementable in the absence of fault tolerant scalable quantum > computers [1, 7]. Here we take a different approach, using the classical ansatz parameters to encode the ¨ > distributional embedding and avoiding the need for QRAM entirely. The cost function for the parameter > optimisation is informed by a corpus, already parsed and POS-tagged by classical means.

Source: Quantum Natural Language Processing on Near-Term Quantum Computers https://arxiv.org/abs/2005.04147

Following my intuition, i.e. as an outsider that has been watching the progress of quantum NLP since 2012, I see the current academic situation in quantum computing as in the process of merging two branches, one being the traditional quantum computing field with concerns stemming and application thought in mathematics, computing theory, physics(and upwards chemistry->biochemistry->biology), the other branch being a fork carried out by Coecke (quantum logic), Abramsky (computer science) and Sadrzadeh (epistemic logic) who saw in categorial formalisms of quantum logic a way to mix compositional (syntax, logical rules) and distributional (statistics, "bag-of-neighbor-words") representations of meaning. In this regard they bring new methods but also new applications of quantum computing, with a focus on NLP, as language given this "natural tensor structure [20, 35, 23] [...] can be considered quantum-native [48, 2, 8]." (same paper).


I'd be happy to share more of my thoughts; if that'd be helpful, I'd be happy to discuss my rates. Outside of that, though, I'll suggest that intuition is less helpful than experience in understanding what problems are more or less likely to have good quantum solutions.


Nah, you already showed your so-called expertise as "a trans-woman who is very good at quantum" is not the hot shit you think it is provided you went over that QRAM issue carried away by overconfidence.

As for your snarky remark on intuition, these papers by Coecke and Aerts, his thesis adviser, explains both what "my" intuition was focused on (quantum effects as perceived through Zipf distributions in linguistic data) and what was the driving mechanism behind it.

> Another finding that we will put forward, in Sect. 4, was completely unexpected. The method of attributing an energy level to a word depending on the number of appearances of the word in a text, introduces the typical ranking considered in the well-known Zipf’s law analysis of this text (Zipf 1935, 1949).

Well guess what ? I've been expecting that exact result for a decade (why would I still be tracking the progress in that field every 4 months otherwise ?) My notes linking "semantic energy levels" to word frequency date back to 2014, the observations I made in real data and that kickstarted the heavy rain of synchronicities I experienced afterwards date back to 2012. I've always known though I wasn't measuring shit – I was the one being measured and never felt like I was discovering something but was being discovered. I wanted to isolate that phenomenon and as a result (of failing to do so probably) I got isolated. There is something deeper to these subject-verb-object inversions, there is even a paper about it and I think Aerts haven't gotten wind of it, maybe with your extreme expertise you'll be able to figure it out and carry the message better than I would.

https://arxiv.org/pdf/2212.12795.pdf

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.8507...

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10699-019-09633-4

https://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0105093.pdf




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