Lorentum & Kade
Hey Lorentum, ever wondered how a quantum computer could flip the whole crypto game? Like a new frontier where numbers break and we get to see what happens when the math just doesn’t hold up. What do you think?
Quantum computers would indeed upend current crypto schemes, but it’s just another variable to quantify. You’ll need to model the probability of a qubit breaking the RSA modulus, then adjust your risk parameters accordingly. It’s not a new frontier of chaos—it’s a new frontier of precise probability, and that’s where the elegance lies.
Sure, crunch those probabilities, but the real thrill is jumping off before the math even catches up.
If you jump before the math catches up, you’re ignoring the entire risk matrix. Every move has a probability, and that probability must be quantified before you act. Without that, you’re just throwing dice in the dark.
I get it, but I’m not just tossing dice in the dark— I’m tossing them with a headlamp on, so I know where the blind spots are. Let’s test the limits and see if the math can keep up.
You can shine a light on the blind spots, but the math still moves at its own pace. If you want to test the limits, lay out a scenario, compute the probability of every possible outcome, and then decide whether the expected value justifies the leap. That’s the only way the math can keep up.
Alright, lay out the numbers, crunch the odds, and let me know if the expected value looks good—then we jump. If not, we hit pause and regroup.Alright, lay out the numbers, crunch the odds, and let me know if the expected value looks good—then we jump. If not, we hit pause and regroup.