The world should prepare for the looming quantum era - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
量子技术

The world should prepare for the looming quantum era

New breakthroughs underscore the technology’s potential and perils

Quantum computers, which could one day blow past the limits of today’s machines, have been a distant dream in the computing world for decades. The challenges of harnessing the weird properties of subatomic particles for computing has made them more intriguing science project than practical technology. But what if, finally, workable quantum computers are nearly within reach?

Recent technical advances have led companies like Google and IBM to predict they will be able to build full-scale quantum systems by the end of this decade. Sensing that the technology may mature years earlier than it had expected, the Pentagon has begun a study to see if any of the commercial efforts could produce results by 2033.

Quantum systems, when they arrive, will remain tools for specialists rather than the masses. But, in the fields where they have most impact, they could usher in a period of considerable discontinuity. The most widely used forms of encryption would be vulnerable, meaning that anyone hoping to protect today’s information from future prying eyes should already be switching to new forms of quantum-proof cryptography. The technology would put new tools into the hands of scientists who could bring breakthroughs in materials or pharmaceuticals, opening up new processes and markets or spelling doom for old ones. In finance, it could bring a better understanding of complex risks and more efficient pricing in markets.

Yet it has been hard even for the companies with the most at stake to know how seriously to prepare for a technology that has always seemed beyond the horizon. Some have made it a focus of advanced research for years, without seeing results.

Like any new technology, timing is key. Investing too early, besides being a waste of resources, risks a backlash. The history of artificial intelligence has been punctuated by “AI winters” or periods of disillusionment that followed bouts of excessive optimism. The intense competition between companies racing to build the first workable quantum computers has made this a natural breeding ground for tech hype, raising the risks of overpromising and disappointment.

Advances in fundamental science have brought the first prototype quantum machines, setting the stage for an attempt to turn these designs into full-scale systems. But there are still considerable engineering challenges to be overcome, injecting uncertainty into the companies’ ambitious timetables. Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, poured cold water on the industry earlier this year when he predicted practical machines were probably still 20 years away, though he later suggested he might have been too negative.

The interplay between quantum technology and AI complicates things further. Rapid advances in AI could make today’s computers far more capable, reducing the need for quantum machines, as Sir Demis Hassabis, head of AI at Google, has suggested. Most in the industry, though, predict a symbiosis between the two technologies that will eventually give a lift to both.

Despite the uncertainties, recent advances in quantum computing should still be a spur to action. This includes working on the tools and the skills that will be needed to make the most of workable quantum machines. On the tools side, new algorithms will be needed to take advantage of the particular properties of quantum machines and make them useful in tackling a wider set of problems.

A bigger skilled workforce will also be essential. Quantum experts have already been in high demand, even before the technology reaches industrial scale. Even if it is difficult to predict precisely when the quantum era will dawn, it’s not too soon to start preparing.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

女性首席执行官为何仍如此之少?

不利的继任计划与股东压力让女性CEO比例的提升步履维艰。

为何2026年将成为生物科技并购大年?

大型制药公司已走出2025年的停滞期,火力十足地开启并购潮。

默茨加大对军备采购的审查力度

德国总理默茨希望巨额国防预算不仅惠及莱茵金属等常规武器公司,也能扶持专注于AI和无人系统的初创企业。

Klarna扩张的警示:把银行当科技公司来运营存在风险

当这家瑞典金融科技公司的新产品实现高速增长时,其短期收入不增反降——股价也随之暴跌。

AMD在数据中心上试验网红跟风效应

这家芯片制造商或许寄望于Meta的背书能吸引其他超大规模云厂商跟进。

“反机器人”运动正在升温

抗议与退订正被鼓吹为当代版的罢工形式。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×