For example, if you subscribe to the MWI model, gaining access to the googolplex of the worlds created every femtosecond and harnessing their computational resources would effectively remove anything resembling a computational speed limit.
So, you can think of this as what quantum computers do, and there's still a pretty normal speed limit. Because all (traditional) interpretations of quantum mechanics run off the exact same math, a good test to apply in these cases is that if it only seems to work in one interpretation, you've probably made a mistake.
And of course, unlike Lord Kelvin's famous claim, we didn't have to discover any new and unexpected physics to build heavier than air flying machines. Carrier's statement is statement literally correct, then - technology will not get you around quantum-mechanical limits, such as they are.
Because all (traditional) interpretations of quantum mechanics run off the exact same math, a good test to apply in these cases is that if it only seems to work in one interpretation, you've probably made a mistake.
True enough, I was referring to the next breakthrough in quantum physics, which, in my estimation, is likely to happen before we reach the current quantum limits, when the interpretations might actually become useful models.
we didn't have to discover any new and unexpected physics to build heavier than air flying machines.
Sometimes techno...
Recently I stumbled upon Richard Carrier's essay "Are We Doomed" (June 5, 2009), when asked to comment about the Singularity, said the following:
What do you think?