A glimpse of the future of computing. [URL]

Please confine these topics to things that would be of general interest to those who are interested in FAH which don't fall into any other category.

Moderator: Site Moderators

Post Reply
NookieBandit
Posts: 45
Joined: Sat Oct 27, 2012 6:17 pm
Hardware configuration: AMD Opteron 2 x 6274 (32 Cores)
AMD FX-8350 (8 Cores)
Intel i7-4790K (8 Cores)
Intel i7-4790K (8 Cores)
Intel i7-4771K (8 Cores)
Intel i7-3770K (8 Cores)
Intel i7-3770K (8 Cores)
Intel i7-3770K (8 Cores)
Intel i7-3770S (8 Cores)
Intel i7-3930K (12 Cores)
Nvidia GPUs:
GTX 780ti
GTX 780ti
GTX 780ti
GTX 780ti
GTX 780
GTX 690
GTX 690
AMD GPUs:
HD 7970 GBE
HD 7970 GBE
HD 7990
HD 7990
HD 7990
R9 295X2
R9 295X2
R9 295X2
Location: Dallas, TX

Quantum Computing article mentions protein folding

Post by NookieBandit »

I ran across this article in the NY Times regarding Lockheed's use of the D-Wave quantum computer in its business. Interestingly, it mentions the use of a computer like this for possible protein folding. I suspect it will be quite some time before our folding rigs will be obsoleted by quantum computing, but nonetheless it could eventually be a tool PG might find very compelling and yield the answers their seeking in a fraction of the time it now takes.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/22/techn ... .html?_r=0
Jesse_V
Site Moderator
Posts: 2851
Joined: Mon Jul 18, 2011 4:44 am
Hardware configuration: OS: Windows 10, Kubuntu 19.04
CPU: i7-6700k
GPU: GTX 970, GTX 1080 TI
RAM: 24 GB DDR4
Location: Western Washington

Re: A glimpse of the future of computing. [URL]

Post by Jesse_V »

Quantum computers are promising, but there's a lot of developmental work to be done on them. It's WAY too early for anyone to start seriously using those as a tool. However, as time goes on, a lot of the underlying problems will be solved, and perhaps we'll start seeing them tackling some exceptionally difficult problems.

Based on the article, I get the impression that protein structure prediction (which involves finding the lowest energy state the protein's configuration could collapse into) would be a problem more applicable to D-Wave computers than actual protein folding, which is more of a study of how the protein gets there. The two are very different problems.
F@h is now the top computing platform on the planet and nothing unites people like a dedicated fight against a common enemy. This virus affects all of us. Lets end it together.
Post Reply