Posted on 03/04/2020 6:20:30 AM PST by Red Badger
The news: Honeywell, a US company best known for its home thermostats, has announced that it has built the worlds most powerful quantum computer. While all eyes were on IBM and Google, which last year knocked heads over quantum supremacy, Honeywell has been working quietly on quantum tech that it plans to make available to clients via the internet in the next three months.
How it works: Most quantum computers, including those being developed by IBM and Google, are built around superconducting qubits, which use supercooled circuits. Honeywells quantum computer uses a different technology, called ion traps, which hold ionsthe computers qubitsin place with electromagnetic fields. Superconducting quantum chips are faster, but ion traps are more accurate and hold their quantum state for longer.
Honeywell also says it can hit pause on a quantum computation, read off the state of a qubit, and then restart the computation down a different path depending on the result. This would make it possible to execute something like an if statement mid-computationa fundamental part of coding languages.
Honeywell posted details of how its system works to the arXiv pre-print repository yesterday. The firm claims its computer will be twice as powerful as IBMs machine, Q System One, when it launches, although that particular claim is likely to be contested.
Partnerships: Honeywell also has partnerships with JPMorgan Chase and Microsoft, which will provide quantum computing algorithms and general computing know-how, as well as investments in smaller quantum computing specialists.
Do we believe it? There are good reasons to. Honeywell might seem like an outsider in this space, but it is a massive company with a wealth of industrial expertise that goes well beyond thermostats, especially in many high-precision sectors such as defense and aerospace. Its experience working with vacuums and cryogenics is likely to have played a big part in its efforts to build a quantum computer, which draws on many more areas of engineering than a regular computer. This suggests the smart money for next-gen quantum tech should be on industrial conglomerates like Honeywell just as much as on traditional tech giants like IBM and Google.
Still, for now this is just an announcement. We will have to wait a few more months to see what Honeywells quantum computer can actually do.
Tech Ping!................
Honeywells quantum computer uses a different technology, called ion traps, which hold ionsthe computers qubitsin place with electromagnetic fields...
If anyone doesn’t understand this don’t even bother to post to me again.
Why a 5 year old child could understand it.
Now let me go find a 5 year old child... :)
Tech Ping
I don’t understand it, but I’ll buy one when they get the price down.
Ya know, the quantum computer was Noahs Ark. It was built using qubits.
Have they caught up to the Chinese with this example? There must be a huge line with NSA, DARPA, NASA, all the military branches up at the front of the line
ISWYDT......................
The Chinese computer has a virus....................
Googles quantum computer. The company said in a paper published on Wednesday that the machine needed only a few minutes to perform a task that would take a supercomputer at least 10,000 years.
Honeywell on the rail and moving up...
Actually, Honeywell took over Xerox Data Systems (Who bought into the computer business by acquiring Scientific Data Systems). I think it was a Sigma 6.
That's a pretty neat trick...............I don't think they'll be doing it on desktops any time soon.................
A bump for the “Jewish Bomb Factory” in St Louis Park, MN
That is what it was called inside the company.
Good one!
Biblical pun.
Or... Did the best quantum computer ever built, build Honeywell?
Think about it...
However, they can't get the printer to work right.
I barely understood this post :)
So you owned a computer called a Sigma 6.
Xerox got into the computer business by buying SDS, which i’m not familiar with and Honeywell took over Xerox.
I’m 51. I didn’t get involved in computers really until I was in my mid 20s. Perhas SDS was a little earlier or you just know a lot more about computer companies than me.
I’m going with that answer :)
I looked up Sigma 6 and did not find anything.
I’m not even sure what Honeywell’s main business is.
I did graphics and presentations creation for investment banks for 20 years. Not too much on the tech side of things
Before the allied signal deal Honeywell bought the GE computer systems group. The large GE computers were HQ'd in Phoenix. They operating system was GCOS or GECOS. they also had Multics running on the GE machines.
Honeywell also bought XDS primarily for their PL1 compiler.
I don’t get it...................
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