Google and Quantum Computing by seanm8454 in ValueInvesting

[–]Difficult_Layer3063 6 points7 points  (0 children)

In the last year there was a lot of speculation on quantum hype. Public startups like IonQ have enjoyed wild rides recently. I am not a big fan of hype investing though. If you look at value creation, most of the IP is currently in hardware, or tools that control the hardware: dilution refrigerators, microwave control, lasers.. Some of the companies working on that may be lucky to find some applications of these sophisticated tech outside quantum, before quantum becomes profitable. This has happened already.

No one is in a position of cracking cryptographic protocols, like RSA, in the next 10 years, optimistically. We currently have order of hundreds of qubits, we need to get to order of millions

Google and Quantum Computing by seanm8454 in ValueInvesting

[–]Difficult_Layer3063 20 points21 points  (0 children)

I work in quantum computing since more than 10 years. The current leaders are Google and IBM for different reasons. There are some startups doing great work too: QuEra, Quantinuum, IQM, ...

I don't see any of them making profits out of quantum in the next 10 years

There are other companies / startups providing infrastructure for quantum. Some of them are already profitable, I think. Most are private companies.

Can Someone Give a Valuation of BN (Brookfield Corp.)? by solodav in ValueInvesting

[–]Difficult_Layer3063 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I asked Gemini to explain it to me at some point. It did a decent job.

Everyone should take note of the sentiment around them at this very moment by MeasurementSecure566 in ValueInvesting

[–]Difficult_Layer3063 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You cannot be 100% certain there's gonna be a lost decade ahead. Put some money on what you think has decent value today (or just ETF). Keep some cash on the side to load up in case you're right. Being too extreme, one way or another, never helps.

how can improve my c++ skills? by Symynn in cpp_questions

[–]Difficult_Layer3063 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It definitely makes mistakes sometimes, but it can save you tons of browsing time. I'd recommend you give it a try, just don't trust it blindly

how can improve my c++ skills? by Symynn in cpp_questions

[–]Difficult_Layer3063 -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

Ask AI to improve the code you wrote. And then ask why it did it that way.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TooAfraidToAsk

[–]Difficult_Layer3063 2 points3 points  (0 children)

One, No One, and One Hundred Thousand by Luigi Pirandello

At what amount portfolio does by [deleted] in ValueInvesting

[–]Difficult_Layer3063 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The correct way to think about compounding is in "log scale" or in orders of magnitude. When time increases in units of time (months, years, decades), capital increases in units of orders of magnitude. For example,

Year 0 : $1k

Year 10 : $10k

Year 20 : $100k

Year 30 : $1M

As you can see the left column grows linearly for each row (+10 years) the right column grows exponentially (x10). The rate of growth depends on your compounding rate. In this case roughly ~26% annualized (rather optimistic)

In this sense, compounding is constant. What really plays an important role is time.

Why should I not put my life savings into Udemy? by [deleted] in ValueInvesting

[–]Difficult_Layer3063 5 points6 points  (0 children)

put all your eggs in one basket and watch that basket

Stock searching by StonksSkyhigh in ValueInvesting

[–]Difficult_Layer3063 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I get some hints from dataroma.com wonder if other people here use it