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davidog.pngDave Bacon is a theoretical ski bum who is also a pseudo professor. His research is on quantum computing, his scientific passions extend to everything in physics, mathematics, computer science and beyond, and his personal pleasures include making wine, playing poker, skiing, camping, and daydreaming (although not all of those at the same time.) Nothing he says on this blog should be construed as having anything to do with his employer or his dog.


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« Signs of the Apocalypse: Google Finance Edition | Main | SOHCAHTOA »

Mortgage Backed Quantum Computers

Category: Quantum
Posted on: October 10, 2008 2:41 PM, by Dave Bacon

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From the annals of strangely mixed news stories. Canada: $25 billion government bailout and....$50 million for the University of Waterloo's Institute for Quantum Computing:

BRANTFORD, Ont. -- The $25-billion government deal to buy mortgages from Canada's banks isn't a lifeline for lenders stuck with bum loans, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Friday...

He said the government will likely make money on the deal, because its borrowing costs are lower than those available to banks.

Harper also produced an election goodie, promising a $50-million grant to a high-tech research lab at the University of Waterloo.

The money goes to the university's Institute of [sic] Quantum Computing.

The prime minister says it's in line with the government's efforts to spur research and development.

A new way to get out of the financial crisis: invest in the quantum computing! (joke about a superposition of rich and poor deleted for sanity's sake.)

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Comments

1

Hmmm ... $50M for quantum information science ... seems like a lot ... so let's do a Fermi calculation ... let's see ... the markets have dropped about $10^13 dollars this week ... so that $50M represents ...

Just three seconds of this week's financial free-fall.

So, how important is quantum information science to the global economy? If it could slow the world's economic free-fall by even three seconds, it would pay for itself.

Posted by: John Sidles | October 10, 2008 7:50 PM

2

I remember a cartoon in the New Yorker (back when I myself was a New Yorker, prior to coming to Caltech in 1968) where a talking head on TV was saying: "The Dow Jones briefly reached infinity today, before profit-takers moved in."

QC on Wall Street may indeed grapple with infinite temperature systems (i.e. coherent, when looked at as thermal exponential distributions).

I'm in a mixed state, myself. My retirement portfolio was 96% wiped out in the dotcom bust. What was left has, in past month, been cut by 2/3. My euros in the Bank of Iceland are in limbo (3/4 to be covered by the IMF?). My Altadena home, a few blocks from where Feynman lived, and a few blocks in another diredction from where he's buried, has been dropping in value by roughly 1 kilobuck per day for the past year and a half.

And yet I still have a (low-paying) job, live in that house, have a loving wife and son and dog. So the sky is in a mixed state of having fallen and not fallen and being a lovely "sky-blue pink."

Posted by: Jonathan Vos Post | October 11, 2008 11:44 AM

3

Seems to me $50 million is a huge investment for something like quantum computing, especially since the field is still somewhat speculative and its claims probably exaggerated. I bet lots of people down here in the States working on QC would like a grant like that. If they put that much money into the national labs ($50 million is far more than they are investing at Sandia by a HUGE margin) that would be amazing. I say kudos to the Canadian government for putting such a large investment in what many would view as esoteric science. Of course years down the road if quantum computers actually live up to their promise then this will look like a really forward looking investment.

Posted by: David McMahon | October 11, 2008 6:38 PM

4

"$50 million is far more than they are investing at Sandia by a HUGE margin"

What? Sandia's budget is way over a billion $ ... or do you mean just on Quantum Computing?

Posted by: Markk | October 16, 2008 3:28 PM

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