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Supercomputing Google

Google Says Its New Quantum Chip Indicates That Multiple Universes Exist (techcrunch.com) 45

Tucked away in a blog post about Google's quantum computing chip, Willow, Google Quantum AI founder Hartmut Neven wrote that the chip was so "mind-boggling" fast that it seemed to borrow computational power from other universes. According to Neven, the chip's performance suggests the existence of parallel universes, writing, "We live in a multiverse." TechCrunch reports: Here's the passage: "Willow's performance on this benchmark is astonishing: It performed a computation in under five minutes that would take one of today's fastest supercomputers 1025 or 10 septillion years. If you want to write it out, it's 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 years. This mind-boggling number exceeds known timescales in physics and vastly exceeds the age of the universe. It lends credence to the notion that quantum computation occurs in many parallel universes, in line with the idea that we live in a multiverse, a prediction first made by David Deutsch."

This drop-the-mic moment on the nature of reality was met with skepticism by some, but, surprisingly, others on the internet who profess to understand these things argued that Nevan's conclusions were more than plausible. The multiverse, while stuff of science fiction, is also an area of serious study by the founders of quantum physics. The skeptics, however, point out that the performance claims are based on the benchmark that Google itself created some years ago to measure quantum performance. That alone doesn't prove that parallel versions of you aren't running around in other universes -- just where the underlying measuring stick came from.

Google Says Its New Quantum Chip Indicates That Multiple Universes Exist

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  • by DrMrLordX ( 559371 ) on Friday December 13, 2024 @09:11PM (#65012251)

    The multiverse might want it's computational power back.

    • Re: Uh oh (Score:5, Funny)

      by 50000BTU_barbecue ( 588132 ) on Friday December 13, 2024 @09:20PM (#65012269) Journal

      The apostropheverse wants its superfluous apostrophe back. It's means "it is".

    • Hmmm. The citations say that a Google spokesperson, observing a Google benchmark through a Google processor was so incredible that many zeros were needed to demonstrate the result.

      Let's see if a third party, using a demonstrably repetitive and reliable rubric, is suddenly aided by a multiverse output.

      It will be a SHTF moment for Google, deflating many, many zeroes.

      • If that third party writes a proof and submits it to arXiv the argument can actually start. Til then it's all just puffery.
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Or at least to stop mining Bitcoin on their PCs.

      • Or at least to stop mining Bitcoin on their PCs.

        A processor approaching this power should be able to break Bitcoin, putting a sudden end to this pestilence. As a bonus, most of the world's bad guys will be out huge sums of money.

        • by Bozzio ( 183974 )

          I don't undestand how a grown adult can use the phrase "bad guys" earnestly. Cartoons have "bad guys." Reality has nuance.

          • by skam240 ( 789197 )

            I don't understand how you dont get the concept that "bad guys" are simply people that do bad things. It's a subjective term of course but for instance most would call a group like ISIS "bad guys" and that would make a lot of sense if you happen to be of the opinion that killing people for not believing in your god, being gay or for any number of other reasons is bad.

            • by Bozzio ( 183974 )

              I don't get how, from my original complain, you think I don't undertand what 'bad guys" means. Of course I do. It's a term for little children.

              My point was that it's a childish, borderline useless, term. Whenever I hear/see an adult use it it rings as "ethical assessment outsource to 3rd party."

              Anyway. How could you possibly think I didn't understand the definition of "bad guy" ???

    • I imagine that the conductors of the simulation wonder what novel uses these little sentient agents are creating with their photons and electrons.

      Also, the multiverse is just an side-effect of the parallelized nature of said simulation (they have to re-use the same particle in different cases).

  • by codebase7 ( 9682010 ) on Friday December 13, 2024 @09:14PM (#65012253)
    "X did something faster than before, and is within expectations of X's capabilities, so Y must have been involved and therefore exists!"

    Where have I heard that one before?
    • "X did something faster than before, and is within expectations of X's capabilities, so Y must have been involved and therefore exists!"

      Where have I heard that one before?

      Maybe, but there is support from many in the scientific community for their findings. If it was a complete crackpot idea no one would be supporting further testing.

      • Maybe, but there is support from many in the scientific community for their findings. If it was a complete crackpot idea no one would be supporting further testing.

        Have you paid any attention at all to the world in 2024?

  • by commodore73 ( 967172 ) on Friday December 13, 2024 @09:14PM (#65012255)
    Ergo, multiverse must be real.
  • First, that "benchmark" does not say what they claim it says. Second, even if it did, that conclusion about parallel universes is complete bullshit and unfounded.

  • Ummmm (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Berkyjay ( 1225604 ) on Friday December 13, 2024 @09:42PM (#65012297)

    No. Isn't this the same company with the dev who thought his AI was alive and conscious?

    • It's crazy how smart people can be so stupid. Oh yeah, marketing sells. Because marketing and reality work in separate metaverses. Google just proved it.
      • I have an engineering mentor who I used to work for. He's a brilliant coder and has rock solid engineering principles. But he's VERY into astrology. I could never square that circle about him.

        • I'll consider any possibility, including such ancient, fabricated mythologies, but my actual beliefs are based on evidence and subject to change with experience. I am a Taurus, born in the lunar year of the Ox, and I act very much like a Taurus (or really, more like a bull in a China shop). Every twelve years, I'm a triple Ox. I can read into this, but I can't determine potential cause and effect, if any. Do I act like a Taurus because I have been told that I am a Taurus, and the characteristics of a Taurus
          • I'm more of a "understand the core laws of the universe and be open to anything that fits within those laws. I also don't subscribe to the "if we don't know then it's possible" way of thinking. So with things like astrology I usually dismiss them outright. But I do agree that the human mind is tailor made to invent things and belief in the impossible is fundamental to human thought.

            • Maybe we really are just like AIs, though maybe even more capable of hallucinating. At least it's fun to be human. It's scary that we're training these systems on our output.
    • Imagine you encountered ChatGTP without the benefit of the national consensus on its actual capabilities. You might be fooled into thinking it was AGI.
      • No, not in the slightest.

        • It's easy to say that now. Can you put yourself in the position of someone who's never seen that tech before? At a time when no one had seen that tech before?
          • You can't be this naive. LLMs aren't some tech that just sprang out of nowhere. It has been developed over a course of decades. There are dozens of publicly available research papers out there to read. Anyone with half a brain can understand the basics of how it works and understand that it is not intelligence. Only someone delusional would think otherwise. So again, no, I would never confuse it for anything other than a glorified lookup table with a mind-bogglingly large indexed dataset.

    • A single programmer in a company of thousands isnt really cause to assume all thousand employees have a problem. There is a reason said dev was immediately fired.
  • To run this miracle of a processor, you're gonna need something with a little more kick to generate the 1.21 gigawatts of electricity it needs. . . . .
    . . . . and probably an entire lake just to keep it cooled :|

  • in line with the idea that we live in a multiverse, a prediction first made by David Deutsch

    ..was it not Hugh Everett that first proposed a many-worlds/multiverse interpretation, rather than David Deutsch? (I know super little about this and am probably showing my ignorance - David Deutschs work seems more directly relevant to computation?)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Everett_III/ [wikipedia.org]

  • It lends credence to the notion that quantum computation occurs in many parallel universes

    Hopefully not true, as if so it means you have basically built a terminal for a timeshare system.

    Which means as other worlds in the multiverse also build the same quantum computation, it will slow down our quantum computers - possibly even causing contention over shared resources

    You can imagine that as some point a galactic IT worker is going to come through a portal and demand we pay up for stolen resources.

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      It lends credence to the notion that quantum computation occurs in many parallel universes

      Hopefully not true, as if so it means you have basically built a terminal for a timeshare system.

      Which means as other worlds in the multiverse also build the same quantum computation, it will slow down our quantum computers - possibly even causing contention over shared resources

      I guess we can look forward to an infinite number of infinity wars! Maybe we're already in one and just don't realize it yet.

  • This has to be one of the most asinine statements I've read in a long time. Was this story actually an April 1 holdover?

    But honestly, I'm guessing this was less a serious statement and more a case of rah-rah marketing blathering than anything else - given the statement was made by the co-founder of the group involved.

  • All I want to know is if this thing can be harnessed to get me into the universe in which Star Trek was not ruined!

  • Posts like this are not signs of new physics. They are signs that the underlying technology is fruitless and functionally a scam. It's also a sign that people running the programs have become shut-eye [youtube.com] and believe their own hype. Much like fusion power, AI, self-driving cars, biofuels, clean coal, hydrogen fuel cells, carbon-capture, and quantum computing isn't real, it's the sincere hope of the rich and powerful who want to keep being rich and powerful.

    If something can't go on forever, it won't. There are

  • There is nothing in this article that even remotely pertains to any sort of proof that backs up the claims. This story is about as valid as that one time a Google researcher said that their chatbot was sentient. Utter bullshit.

    https://www.scientificamerican... [scientificamerican.com]

  • OR the wavefunction collapsed completely in line with the Copenhagen interpretation. Excellent! We've now got solid proof that our various interpretations of quantum physics are indeed varied and interpretations. Good work, gentlemen.

It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.

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