Quantum Computer Science: An Introduction. N. David Mermin

Quantum Computer Science: An Introduction


Quantum.Computer.Science.An.Introduction.pdf
ISBN: 0521876583,9780521876582 | 237 pages | 6 Mb


Download Quantum Computer Science: An Introduction



Quantum Computer Science: An Introduction N. David Mermin
Publisher: Cambridge University Press




I'd consider the first three In my opinion software developers would benefit greatly from the humility implied in Fisher's statement, as would their software benefit from being subjected to the same rigour of testing as, say, the theory of quantum electrodynamics. Not bad considering Amazon.com claims its publication date was September 17. I think both computer scientists and some statisticians are unfamiliar with basic ideas in what used to be called numerical analysis, and especially methods of numerical linear algebra. Publisher: Cambridge University Press 2007. Quantum Computer Science: An Introduction by Mermin. It could train medical-diagnosis programs, image-recognition programs, or even programs that summarize the key concepts behind a book or a scientific paper. An international team of physicists is the first to implement in the lab an important "error correction" technique that could play a vital role in the development of practical quantum computers. I apologize in advance for the length of this post, but please don't let . David Mermin's new book, Quantum Computer Science: An Introduction, just arrived in my mailbox today. It is not a post describing programming or algorithms per se, but it will give some good background introduction to how quantum computers can be used for learning tasks. 160,000 students from 190 countries enrolled. The first MOOC was launched at Stanford in 2011 when Sebastian Thrun, a computer science professor, offered an online open-access course on artificial intelligence. Quantum Computer Science by David Mermin. Complex Social Networks by Vega-Redondo; Branching Programs and Binary Decision Diagrams by Wegener. EdX is showing 23 course offerings as of this posting, with titles such as The Ancient Greek Hero (Harvard), The Challenges of Global Poverty (MIT), and Quantum Mechanics and Quantum Computation (Berkeley).