Michael Frank's Quantum Computation Links

To prepare for my area exam on Quantum Computation, I have spent an evening searching the web and gathering links on the topic. Here's what I found:
Los Alamos Quantum Physics E-print Archive
This is the source for the latest papers in quantum computing (only days old, uploaded by the authors) as well as for many papers from the last several years. The quantum computing papers are mixed in with papers on other quantum physics topics though.
Quantum Computation Reference Collection
A comprehensive paper archive at Stanford. Looks excellent. Contains some original papers.
Aladdin Seminar on Quantum Computation
Berthiaume's quantum computation seminar in the Netherlands. Includes a good paper.
U. Montreal's Lab for Theoretical and Quantum Computing
Has a little info on quantum cryptography & teleportation.
UCLA Particle Beam Physics Lab "Quantum Information" Page
Has a good list of journal articles on quantum computing.
Caltech Quantum Optics Group
These guys do actual experiments!
"Quantum computation: a tutorial"
By some guy I never heard of. Looks worth reading though.
Oxford Quantum Computing and Cryptography Group
Includes some big names in the field. (E.g. Barenco.)
DiVencenzo, "Two-bit Gates are Universal for Quantum Computation"
Abstract & a link to the paper.
Q-gol Quantum Programming Language
A programming language for quantum computers invented by a student in Australia.
IBM's Quantum Information and Computation Group
Contains a list of group members but not much else.
Sarfatti, "Progress in Quantum Computing"
I have no idea who this guy is or whether his paper his any good.
Oxford Quantum Information articles
Paper list at Oxford. Contains Postscript of many.
MIT Information Mechanics Group
Now based at Boston University. Has hosted talks on QC.
Gramss, "A Quantum Turing Machine with a Local Hamiltonian"
A paper by some guy at Santa Fe.
Quantum Cryptoanalysis of Hidden Linear Forms
A talk by Princeton's Dan Boneh recently presented at MIT.
Cambridge U. Security Group Seminar, 28th November 1995
Abstract of a recent talk by Eckert from Oxford.

Mike Frank, last updated 1/30/96