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TED Talks Daily

Quantum computing explained in 10 minutes | Shohini Ghose

TED Talks Daily

TED

Creativity, Ted Podcast, Ted Talks Daily, Business, Design, Inspiration, Society & Culture, Science, Technology, Education, Tech Demo, Ted Talks, Ted, Entertainment, Tedtalks

4.111.9K Ratings

🗓️ 11 January 2019

⏱️ 10 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A quantum computer isn't just a more powerful version of the computers we use today; it's something else entirely, based on emerging scientific understanding -- and more than a bit of uncertainty. Enter the quantum wonderland with TED Fellow Shohini Ghose and learn how this technology holds the potential to transform medicine, create unbreakable encryption and even teleport information.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This TED Talk features quantum physicist and equity advocate

0:04.8

Shohini Goes, recorded live at TED Women 2018.

0:11.0

Let's play a game.

0:13.0

Imagine that you are in Las Vegas in a casino,

0:17.0

and you decide to play a game on one of the casino's computers, just like you might play solitaire or chess.

0:23.6

The computer can make moves in the game just like a human player.

0:27.6

This is a coin game.

0:30.6

It starts with a coin showing heads,

0:33.6

and the computer will play first.

0:35.6

It can choose to flip the coin or not, but you don't get to

0:40.0

see the outcome. Next, it's your turn. You can also choose to flip the coin or not, and your move

0:47.2

will not be revealed to your opponent, the computer. Finally, the computer plays again and can flip

0:52.9

the coin or not, and after these three rounds, the computer plays again and can flip the coin or not,

0:58.4

and after these three rounds, the coin is revealed.

1:01.4

And if it is heads, the computer wins.

1:03.4

If it's tails, you win.

1:06.1

So it's a pretty simple game,

1:09.5

and if everybody plays honestly and the coin is fair,

1:12.7

then you have a 50% chance of winning this game.

1:18.6

And to confirm that, I asked my students to play this game on our computers.

1:26.3

And after many, many tries, their winning rate ended up being 50% or close to 50% as expected.

1:28.3

Sounds like a boring game, right? But what if you could play this game on a quantum computer?

...

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