OK. But consider that some theorists make a direct link between quantum computing and non-locality ([1], [2]) while others ([3], [4]) question whether non-locality exists, despite years of confirmation of violations of Bell’s Inequality.
If - and it is a big IF - non-locality isn’t a thing, then quantum computing may be an illusion.
If quantum computing is illusory, then companies offering the “quantum-ready” are peddling FUD, snake-oil, no?
Thoughts?
[1] https://phys.org/news/2016-04-quantum-involves-nonlocality.html [2] https://www.imperial.ac.uk/media/imperial-college/research-centres-and-groups/controlled-quantum-dynamics/public/people/Matt_Pusey_MRes_new.pdf [3] http://backreaction.blogspot.com/2021/12/does-superdeterminism-save-quantum.html (recently discussed on HN, [5]) [4] https://www.researchgate.net/publication/325922318_The_notion_of_locality_in_relational_quantum_mechanics [5] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29610441#29618846
The more books you read about Bell's Theorem the more confused you will get so unless you are doing experiments in that field you shouldn't read books about it... there's nothing to see there, move on.
The basis for nonlocality is that there is no wavefunction for "an electron" but there is a wavefunction for all the electrons. You can't tell the difference between electron A and electron B so you can change one for another and the wavefunction is the same except that the sign of the wavefunction is flipped because electrons obey Fermi-Dirac statistics.
If you swap Photon A and Photon B on the other hand the wavefunction is exactly the same because photons obey Bose-Einstein statistics.
That's all there is to quantum entanglement, and the two greatest miracles that result from it are.
(1) Two fermions cannot occupy the same quantum state, which makes matter stable. This is why atoms are stable and why you can sit in a chair. In classical mechanics solid materials are impossible!
(2) Bosons want to dogpile in the same state if they have the opportunity, which is the principle of operation of a laser.
Every time you use solid matter or a laser you are using quantum entanglement and that is every bit as profound as any other implication of the phenomenon.
Thus every prediction about the effects of practical widespread quantum computing is a guess.
Look at the prediction thread here on HN from the eve of 2020, there are only 3 hints at the current public health crisis, and none of them were specific. I read them all a while ago... whew - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21941278
Thus our ability here at HN to guess about the future is horrible.