CompSci Weekend SuperThread (April 06, 2018) Computer Science |
- CompSci Weekend SuperThread (April 06, 2018)
- What is the reason why quantum computers are not much better than Classical computers at solving Chess?
- Computer Theory and Physics
- What is an average, good and excellent impact factor of CS journals?
- Software Development Design Principles
CompSci Weekend SuperThread (April 06, 2018) Posted: 05 Apr 2018 06:06 PM PDT /r/compsci strives to be the best online community for computer scientists. We moderate posts to keep things on topic. This Weekend SuperThread provides a discussion area for posts that might be off-topic normally. Anything Goes: post your questions, ideas, requests for help, musings, or whatever comes to mind as comments in this thread. Pointers
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Posted: 05 Apr 2018 12:25 PM PDT Is this because once you use the superposed states to do parallel computing at extremely fast speed, the superposed states disappears immediately unless you explicitly store them into memory, which defeats the purpose of using a quantum computer as it cancels out the speed advantage you get from using superposition? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 05 Apr 2018 03:30 PM PDT Hi All, I've been applying concepts from information theory and computer theory to physics, and have developed a set assumptions that imply that time-dilation will occur, producing equations that are identical to those given by the special theory of relativity. I've received great feedback from physicists, but I've yet to run the ideas by anyone from the CS / math community. I'd appreciate your thoughts: a link to my working paper is below. I'd of course be happy to answer any questions you might have. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/323684258_A_Computational_Model_of_Time-Dilation [link] [comments] |
What is an average, good and excellent impact factor of CS journals? Posted: 05 Apr 2018 04:19 PM PDT |
Software Development Design Principles Posted: 05 Apr 2018 12:11 PM PDT |
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