From: chen@intuit.com (Mark Chen)
To: kinney@bogart.Colorado.EDU (W. Kinney)
Message Hash: 874eccea50e15be144a52d11c15b726190567a4d53aa963af502de8a8fc13997
Message ID: <9510060507.AA20374@doom>
Reply To: <199510011929.NAA29289@bogart.Colorado.EDU>
UTC Datetime: 1995-10-06 05:15:05 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 5 Oct 95 22:15:05 PDT
From: chen@intuit.com (Mark Chen)
Date: Thu, 5 Oct 95 22:15:05 PDT
To: kinney@bogart.Colorado.EDU (W. Kinney)
Subject: Re: Quantum Crypto: Anecdote
In-Reply-To: <199510011929.NAA29289@bogart.Colorado.EDU>
Message-ID: <9510060507.AA20374@doom>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
> Given the regularity with which fears of factoring by quantum
> compters comes up around here, I thought I'd share a brief story: At
> a party last night, I ran into a couple of acquantances, and was
> delighted to learn that they are working on the current NIST quantum
> computing project, making quantum gates out of atomic traps similar
> to those used by Cornell and Weiman to get a Bose condensate with
> Rubidium (crypto relevance comes from odd places, eh?) Anyway, I
> talked them up a bit, and so far they've managed to construct a
> working "or" gate. The long-term project is to construct a quantum
> computer capable of factoring 15, which they expect to take at least
> several years.
Vazirani gave a talk at Parc a couple weeks ago, at which he described
a similar project under way at Los Alamos. It's allegedly being
headed by Richard Hughes.
- Mark -
--
Mark Chen
chen@intuit.com
415/329-6913
finger for PGP public key
D4 99 54 2A 98 B1 48 0C CF 95 A5 B0 6E E0 1E 1D
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