Hey I game on a laptop. It has a Geforce 300M GPU. It was, indeed, rather expensive when I bought it. And it is, indeed, a lot less powerful than any desktop I might have purchased for the same money. However, it does run 99% of games nicely, the only exception I can think of being GTA4 which is known to be horribly optimised.Ultratwinkie said:That's your problem. Laptops are never meant for gaming.
Even when they are, they are incredibly expensive and lack the power of a true rig. Unless you are gaming on a desktop, you might as well not even bother.
They've performed quantum computations using absurdly complicated arrangements. They're nowhere near a general purpose quantum computer. They're not even anywhere near computations large enough to be useful. The main catch is that information about the internal state of the device cannot leak into the outside world or the computation is ruined.maxmanrules said:I have read some stuff about quantum computers, but it was a couple of years ago in the NZ PC World magazine. They had a working one, but data storage was only 75% accurate or something, so it was practically useless.
The other, more significant catch for gaming is that it only speeds up tasks for which an efficient quantum algorithm is known. It's not some magic thing that will give you a million frames per second in Crysis. Useful quantum algorithms rely on manipulating a small dataset in conventionally impossible ways to get an answer that could not be efficiently found with a conventional computer. But current rendering techniques are already quite efficient considering the amount of data involved.