Re: [Qirg] Qirg Digest, Vol 16, Issue 1

Yaakov Stein <yaakov_s@rad.com> Thu, 11 July 2019 13:30 UTC

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From: Yaakov Stein <yaakov_s@rad.com>
To: gyananjay rai <gyananjay.rai@gmail.com>, "qirg@irtf.org" <qirg@irtf.org>
Thread-Topic: [Qirg] Qirg Digest, Vol 16, Issue 1
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Date: Thu, 11 Jul 2019 13:30:12 +0000
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Subject: Re: [Qirg] Qirg Digest, Vol 16, Issue 1
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Sorry for the delay in responding.

I rather feel your different recent generations can be summed in Moore's law
Moore’s law only applies to the last of the computational generations (number of transistors on a chip).
It doesn’t apply to communications. In fact, rates in a fiber follow Butter’s Law, which is faster than Moore’s,
while rates on wireless tend to be very limited by Shannon’s law, and can’t grow very much at all
(witness the mere factor of 3 speed-up of 5G with respect to 4G given the same bandwidths).

Moore's law constrain of exponential  scaling compute power makes quantum computing an attractive architecture
Exponential improvement curves tend to make anything else redundant.
Look at what happened to massive parallel 5th generation computing –
its promise was never needed since conventional CPUs became so powerful so quickly.
The only exception is when having to solve exponentially hard problems.
Factoring of integers has not been proven to be NP complete,
and the best solutions are sub-exponential.
Shor’s algorithm factors in polynomial time, so a quantum computer may make a big difference.
However, there are alternative one-way functions for which quantum computer polynomial time solutions is known,
so if your remark related to cryptographic security, it will be much easier (although a logistics challenge) to simply to use them.

The real reason for building quantum computers and a quantum Internet is to do completely new things,
not to be faster than whatever Moore’s law says classical computers can do now.

Let’s see the first few quantum computers and the first few quantum repeaters
before we start extrapolating how they will improve over time.

Y(J)S

From: Qirg [mailto:qirg-bounces@irtf.org] On Behalf Of gyananjay rai
Sent: יום ו 05 יולי 2019 01:12
To: qirg@irtf.org
Subject: Re: [Qirg] Qirg Digest, Vol 16, Issue 1

I agree with ROD.I actually feel quantum generation not  initialize at all.Still with my limited inside I am aware of  Simulators and commercially unviable hybrid classical architecture  instead pure quantum .Somewhere in the making of first generation of quantum commnication/computing....

Dear YS,

I rather feel your different recent generations can be summed in Moore's law(Intel ).Though I am not much familiar with Qualcomm chips for 4G and higher generation handsets.

 Its Moore's law constrain of exponential  scaling compute power makes quantum computing an attractive architecture and somewhat a alternate/ successor of classical computing.

Regards
Gyananjay

On Thu, 4 Jul 2019, 13:35 , <qirg-request@irtf.org<mailto:qirg-request@irtf.org>> wrote:
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Today's Topics:

   1. Re: Hardware Components: Wireless Technologies (Yaakov Stein)



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Yaakov Stein <yaakov_s@rad.com<mailto:yaakov_s@rad.com>>
To: Rodney Van Meter <rdv@sfc.wide.ad.jp<mailto:rdv@sfc.wide.ad.jp>>
Cc: "qirg@irtf.org<mailto:qirg@irtf.org>" <qirg@irtf.org<mailto:qirg@irtf..org>>
Bcc:
Date: Thu, 4 Jul 2019 08:05:00 +0000
Subject: Re: [Qirg] Hardware Components: Wireless Technologies
I have never previously thought about these two types of generations at the same time.

But it would seem that the generations of computing are approximately:
1: (mid) 1940s
2: 1950s (starting with the transistor’s invention in 1956)
3: 1960s (with integrated circuits from about 1964)
4: 1970s (we can take Intel’s 4004 in 1971 as a starting point)
(The fifth generation was a failure (or at least didn’t give birth to a new generation), so we’ll leave it off.)

while the generations of mobile communications are approximately:
1: 1980s (AMPS officially launched in 1982)
2: 1990s (1st GSM call was 1991)
3: 2000s (Telenor’s UMTS from 2001)
4: 2010s (ITU recognized LTE as 4G in Dec 2010)
(5G is not here yet (I mean real 5G, not just NR with option 3), but it will be 2020s)

So, mobile communications started where computation left off,
and both had approximately a decade per generation.

And of course, now the mobile telephone is the most popular computation device on the planet,
so the two worlds of computation and communications and have completely merged into computications.

Y(J)S

From: Qirg [mailto:qirg-bounces@irtf.org<mailto:qirg-bounces@irtf.org>] On Behalf Of Rodney Van Meter
Sent: יום ג 18 יוני 2019 04:24
To: Guntur Wiseno Putra <gsenopu@gmail.com<mailto:gsenopu@gmail.com>>
Cc: Rodney Van Meter <rdv@sfc.wide.ad.jp<mailto:rdv@sfc.wide.ad.jp>>; qirg@irtf.org<mailto:qirg@irtf.org>
Subject: Re: [Qirg] Hardware Components: Wireless Technologies

Unfortunately there’s rather a naming collision in generations (“G”). The quantum network generations have *nothing at all* to do with the wireless cellular generations.

Or, for that matter, computing generations. I run a master’s level seminar class on Software Systems, and I always have one session on Japan’s history.  The student tasked with presenting about the 5G inference engine computer program (https://en..wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth_generation_computer<https://eur01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FFifth_generation_computer&data=01%7C01%7Cyaakov_s%40rad.com%7Caa44ab8db0fc4cefd60f08d700ccc4be%7Cf9047108cc2c4e4897a343fad1b3bf9d%7C1&sdata=6XkUM6q2sDjBrceuR3vjiayKn4pt5XI2NuDhp2SksDw%3D&reserved=0>) instead first spent an entire day in a wireless 5G seminar before realizing she was looking at the wrong thing. She learned quite a lot about both of them, though!

—Rod

Rodney Van Meter
Professor, Faculty of Environment and Information Studies
Keio University, Japan
rdv@sfc.wide.ad.jp<mailto:rdv@sfc.wide.ad.jp>



On Jun 6, 2019, at 22:31, Guntur Wiseno Putra <gsenopu@gmail.com<mailto:gsenopu@gmail.com>> wrote:


Dear qirg@irtf.org<mailto:qirg@irtf.org>,

The previous message "Re: Hardware Components: Wireless Technologies" should be:


Looking at the QIRG mail archives of 27th March 2018 by Rodney van Meter about "Hardware Components" introduced by a plan for 1G, 2G taxonomy



https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/qirg/tXFMnQSCKBbwJj0ODhMkJoVyFBg<https://eur01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fmailarchive.ietf.org%2Farch%2Fmsg%2Fqirg%2FtXFMnQSCKBbwJj0ODhMkJoVyFBg&data=01%7C01%7Cyaakov_s%40rad.com%7Caa44ab8db0fc4cefd60f08d700ccc4be%7Cf9047108cc2c4e4897a343fad1b3bf9d%7C1&sdata=QhZjLYd%2FbsXGKISb%2FWM4yftAw9%2B9dztVv2yIoVryl9g%3D&reserved=0>

: If this reference matters...?


"A Survey on 5G Network: Architecture and Emerging Technologies" (GuptaA. & R.K. Jha, IEEE Access Vol.3, 2015). It made "Section II. The Evolution of Wireless Technologies" mentioning an overview of the evolving wireless technologies from 1G, 2G, 2.5G, 3G, 3.75G, 4G to 5G.


https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7169508<https://eur01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fieeexplore.ieee.org%2Fdocument%2F7169508&data=01%7C01%7Cyaakov_s%40rad.com%7Caa44ab8db0fc4cefd60f08d700ccc4be%7Cf9047108cc2c4e4897a343fad1b3bf9d%7C1&sdata=NX1N1x5t1pb0%2Fozj%2BMl9dNYNcetOkSC3LEoQd4zoxso%3D&reserved=0>

Regard,
Guntur Wiseno Putra



Pada Kamis, 06 Juni 2019, Guntur Wiseno Putra <gsenopu@gmail.com<mailto:gsenopu@gmail.com>> menulis:
Dear qirg@irtf.org<mailto:qirg@irtf.org>,

Looking at the QIRG mail archives of 27th March 2018 by Rodney van Meter about "Hardware Components" introduced by a plan for 1G, 2G taxonomy: If this reference matters...?


"A Survey on 5G Network: Architecture and Emerging Technologies" (GuptaA. & R.K. Jha, IEEE Access Vol.3, 2015). It made "Section II. The Evolution of Wireless Technologies" mentioning an overview of the evolving wireless technologies from 1G, 2G, 2.5G, 3G, 3.75G, 4G to 5G.


https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/qirg/tXFMnQSCKBbwJj0ODhMkJoVyFBg<https://eur01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fmailarchive.ietf.org%2Farch%2Fmsg%2Fqirg%2FtXFMnQSCKBbwJj0ODhMkJoVyFBg&data=01%7C01%7Cyaakov_s%40rad.com%7Caa44ab8db0fc4cefd60f08d700ccc4be%7Cf9047108cc2c4e4897a343fad1b3bf9d%7C1&sdata=QhZjLYd%2FbsXGKISb%2FWM4yftAw9%2B9dztVv2yIoVryl9g%3D&reserved=0>


Regard,
Guntur Wiseno Putra
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