Quantum Computing Explained For Everyone: Applications of Quantum Computing and Its Impact on the Economy, Science and Everyday Life. A Clear and Simple Guide
Quantum Computing for Everyone - Applications of Quantum Computing and Its Impact on the Economy, Science, and Everyday Life. A Clear and Simple GuideAre you ready to step into the future? Quantum computing is not just an evolution in technology—it is a revolution that could redefine our understanding of reality itself.
Artificial intelligence has already transformed the world, but quantum computing has the potential to be an even greater leap forward. This is not just about faster computers; it is about unlocking new dimensions of knowledge, pushing the boundaries of physics, and reshaping industries, economies, and even our daily lives.
Imagine a world where diseases are cured in record time, financial markets operate with unparalleled precision, and scientific discoveries unfold at speeds beyond imagination. Quantum computing could hold the key to solving some of humanity’s most complex challenges, from climate change to space exploration.
This book makes quantum computing accessible to everyone. You do not need to be a scientist or a mathematician to understand how this technology will shape the future. In clear and simple language, this book ✅ What quantum computing is and how it works ✅ How it will impact businesses, finance, healthcare, and cybersecurity ✅ The potential breakthroughs that could redefine our understanding of time, space, and reality itself
This is not science fiction—quantum computing is happening now. The next technological revolution is unfolding before our eyes, and those who understand it today will be best positioned to thrive in the future.
If you are curious about the next great leap in human knowledge, this book is for you.
Start reading now and discover why quantum computing could be the most exciting breakthrough in history.
I’ve only read the sample available on Kindle and the content seemed high-level, but mostly okay. Still, I was puzzled by some aspects of the text:
- Some section headings were phrased in a weird way, as if English weren’t the author’s first language (which isn’t the case based on his bio). But the text of the section contents was fine.
- I started noticing repetition between sections - the text being re-used almost verbatim, swapping the order of some words.
- A really suspicious moment was when the specific phrase (describing how the traditional computers work), sounded too close to a phrase in another book on the same subject that I checked out right before this one (“QUANTUM COMPUTING FOR EVERYONE: A SIMPLE GUIDE” by Kishore Kesanapally). It was rephrased, but felt exactly as if one had taken the sentence from the other book and has purposefully swapped out parts of it:
> Kesanapally: Everything your computer does—showing pictures, playing videos, sending messages—happens because billions of these tiny switches are being turned on and off in specific patterns.
> Soloway: Every calculation, from opening an app to running complex simulations, is performed by manipulating billions of these bits in sequences of zeros and ones.
Then I read Tyson’s review of another book by this author (see https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...). Apparently, that book was generated by ChatGPT and then edited by the author, which would explain all of the issues I noticed with this book as well. I’m not sure if the author acknowledges the use of ChatGPT with this one, but I think there is little doubt about it. N.B.: It is quite possible that Kesanapally’s book is also AI-generated and that is why those sentences sounded similar. Or maybe their book was part of the training dataset and thus re-used (with modifications) by ChatGPT when generating this book.
If this weren’t AI-generated (or at least better edited), I’d have given it 3 stars so far.
This book makes wild, futuristic tech feel down-to-earth. You don’t need a science degree to get what quantum computing is or why it matters. It explains how this mind-bending tech might shake up medicine, money, and daily life. Super easy to follow, even if you’ve never touched a science book. Big ideas, plain talk—definitely worth a read.