WEB FOCUS

2020 – Future of Computing

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Current research | Links | Archive | Sponsor

In the last two decades advances in computing technology, from processing speed to network capacity and the internet, have revolutionized the way scientists work. From sequencing genomes to monitoring the Earth's climate, many recent scientific advances would not have been possible without a parallel increase in computing power - and with revolutionary technologies such as the quantum computer edging towards reality, what will the relationship between computing and science bring us over the next 15 years?

This Nature web focus combines commentaries from leading scientists and news features analysis from journalists assessing how computing science concepts and techniques may transform mainstream science by 2020. Visit News@nature.com's newsblog to read and post comments on the future of computing. Image: Joe Magee

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Current research

NEWS FEATURE

2020 computing: Champing at the bits

Philip Ball

Nature 440, 398–401 (23 March 2006) doi:10.1038/440398a


NEWS FEATURE

2020 computing: Milestones in scientific computing

Jacqueline Ruttimann

Nature 440, 399–405 (23 March 2006) doi:10.1038/440399a


NEWS FEATURE

2020 computing: Everything, everywhere

Declan Butler

Nature 440, 402–405 (23 March 2006) doi:10.1038/440402a


COMMENTARY

2020 computing: Exceeding human limits

Stephen H. Muggleton

Nature 440, 409–410 (23 March 2006) doi:10.1038/440409a


COMMENTARY

2020 computing: The creativity machine

Vernor Vinge

Nature 440, 411–412 (23 March 2006) doi:10.1038/440411a


COMMENTARY

2020 computing: Science in an exponential world

Alexander Szalay and Jim Gray

Nature 440, 413–414 (23 March 2006) doi:10.1038/440413a


COMMENTARY

2020 computing: Can computers help explain biology?

Roger Brent and Jehoshua Bruck

Nature 440, 416–417 (23 March 2006) doi:10.1038/440416a


COMMENTARY

2020 computing: A two-way street to science's future

Ian Foster

Nature 440, 419 (23 March 2006) doi:10.1038/440419a


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Archive

AUTHORS

Making the paper: Onur Hosten

A quantum computer can solve problems without running a program.

Nature 439, xv (23 February 2006) doi:10.1038/7079xva


BUSINESS

Computer hardware: Silicon down to the wire

Nature 436, 22–23 (7 July 2005) doi:10.1038/436022a


NEWS FEATURES

Quantum physics: The philosopher of photons

Quirin Schiermeier

Nature 434, 1066 (28 April 2005) doi:10.1038/4341066a


NEWS FEATURES

Condensed matter physics: Some like it cold

Karen Fox

Nature 434, 430–431 (24 March 2005) doi:10.1038/434430a


NEWS AND VIEWS

Quantum information: To compute or not to compute?

Jonathan P. Dowling

Nature 439, 919–920 (23 February 2006) doi:10.1038/439919a


Quantum computing: Against the odds of imperfection

Daniel Lidar

Nature Physics 1, 145–146 (01 Dec 2005) doi:10.1038/nphys182


Quantum computing: A bit chilly

Leonard J. Schulman

Nature 438, 431–432 (24 November 2005) doi:10.1038/438431a


ESSAY

A better than perfect match

Vlatko Vedral

Nature 439, 397 (26 January 2006) doi:10.1038/439397a


A quantum recipe for life

Paul Davies

Nature 437, 819 (6 October 2005) doi:10.1038/437819a


ARTICLE

Experimental one-way quantum computing

P. Walther et al.

Nature 434, 169–176 (10 March 2005) doi:10.1038/nature03347


LETTERS

Gain without inversion in semiconductor nanostructures

M. D. Frogely et al.

Nature Materials 5, 175–178 (2006) doi:10.1038/nmat1586


Bang-bang control of fullerene qubits using ultrafast phase gates

John J. L. Morton et al.

Nature Physics 2, 40–43 (01 Jan 2006) doi:10.1038/nphys192


Scaling of entanglement close to a quantum phase transition

A. Osterloh et al.

Nature 416, 608–610 (14 May 2005) doi:10.1038/416608a