Defense contractor Lockeed Martin Corp. is betting big on the promise of quantum computing.
The company recently shelled out big money to Canadian firm D-Wave for the world's first commercial quantum computer.
D-Wave says quantum computers can be used to solve hard problems that ordinarily take too long even for supercomputers. Some examples: Financial risk analysis, object recognition in images, computer vision, and bioinformatics -- the types of analytical thinking that people are good at, but computers find difficult.
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Not everyone is a believer in the technology.
It's hard to prove that quantum computing is even taking place. But D-Wave claims to have realized "quantum annealing" in its hardware, as reported in the science journal Nature. Still, there are some scientists who remain skeptical about D-Wave's claims.
The D-Wave One is built around the Rainier processor. It comes in a room-sized cabinet with a 100-square-foot footprint, which houses the extensive shielding required for quantum computing to work, as well as supercooling hardware.
D-Wave is no stranger to the technology industry.
It recently worked with Google to produce software that can recognize automobiles within images. D-Wave's computers actually created algorithms that are being used on mobile phones for that purpose.
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