Reversible logic is fun, but the memory requirements get intense. You need enough storage to retain every intermediate value used in a computation. If you have a 1GHz 64-bit processor and it does an hour-long computation, you need to store the entire 29TB history of its intermediates... and then spend an hour unwinding it!
But currently, the adiabatic chips has a bigger issue with getting to zero: their control circuitry is a bank of AWGs, each burning probably hundreds of watts at room temperature. They ideally don't produce heat in the cold zone, which is great for the cryogenic system, but if we have room temperature superconductors, that's suddenly moot.
But currently, the adiabatic chips has a bigger issue with getting to zero: their control circuitry is a bank of AWGs, each burning probably hundreds of watts at room temperature. They ideally don't produce heat in the cold zone, which is great for the cryogenic system, but if we have room temperature superconductors, that's suddenly moot.