From: Eugene Leitl (Eugene.Leitl@lrz.uni-muenchen.de)
Date: Wed Jan 29 1997 - 14:39:37 MST
On Wed, 29 Jan 1997, Lee Daniel Crocker wrote:
> > [...]
>
> How will quantum computation help protein-folding simulations? Isn't
> that a fairly linear problem (i.e., not very suitable to parallelism)?
No, it is not. Imo, a cellular-automaton inspired simulation paradigm (no,
these CAs are not only useful for Brosslacher's toy hydrodynamics) is
extremely parallel. It would run great on a 3-torus of DSPs (6 links
ought suffice), even beter on dedicated yet-to-come hardware. Some of MIT
CAM-8 guys are doing interesting stuff, but no discrete/continuous synthesis
yet (I know how, but won't tell).
One can design/grow CAs to model any physical system in existance (and a
lot of them which are not). I'm serious, check them out.
> If so, that'd be great. That's probably the fastest way to nanotech,
> because we already have the ability to synthesize arbitrary proteins,
> and suitable environments for them are cheap.
ciao,
'gene
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