MachineMan
MachineMan
4 / 7
5th May 2019
27th Jul 2019
I wouldn't consider it quantum, but it technically is since photons are fundamental particles. Also; quantum binary works similarly to binary, so you have know how to count in binary to use this save.
quantum mechanics useful electronic

Comments

  • MachineMan
    MachineMan
    30th Jun 2022
    ArolaunTech: I did the best I could. Ok?
  • ArolaunTech
    ArolaunTech
    15th Jan 2022
    not quantum, not a computer -1
  • MachineMan
    MachineMan
    26th Sep 2021
    That's because the "master" filter's job is to collapse the white photon (which is 0 and 1 at the same time) into either red (which is only 0) or green (which is only 1.)
  • Chemlab
    Chemlab
    17th Feb 2021
    Yes, but the color of the photon is determined completely by the color of the master filter, which is always either 0 or 1.
  • MachineMan
    MachineMan
    14th Feb 2020
    I hadn't checked in for a while. Anyways, a white photon is every color at once including red and green. The "master" filter collapses it into just one of those colors, or the other.
  • Chemlab
    Chemlab
    31st Oct 2019
    actually a white photon would just be a third value, not a superposition of two values.
  • MachineMan
    MachineMan
    11th Aug 2019
    I define bit and qubit values as green=1 and red=0. A white photon, or qubit, is in a superposition of both.
  • Chemlab
    Chemlab
    10th Aug 2019
    but to be a computer, it has to be programmable (also, quantum bits are supposed to be both 1 and 0 at the same time)
  • MachineMan
    MachineMan
    30th Jul 2019
    Sorry, "it uses has" was a typo.
  • MachineMan
    MachineMan
    30th Jul 2019
    Yes it is; it uses has a screen, it can count, and it uses binary (or more accurately, quantum binary.)