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Tangential question...

Seen that many are already moving to QC-resistant cryptography and that more are shifting by the day... I've got a question: what are the implications of quantum computers going to be if we consider that the entirety of cryptography will have moved to quantum-resistant cryptography?

In other words: I only ever read about quantum computing when it's to talk about breaking cryptography. But what if all cryptography moves to quantum-resistant scheme, all of it... Then what are the uses of quantum computing? Protein folding? Logistics?

Basically, so far, quantum computing research has the effect of many companies and projects adding quantum-resistant cryptographic schemes.

If, say, we've got a $10 million quantum computer that can break one 256 bit elliptic curve key in an hour... Great, EC is broken. But what if browsers, SSH, auth, etc. just about everything moves to PQ schemes...

Then what are those quantum computers useful for?

I understand that breaking even a single EC 256 bit key in a few hours on a $$$ machine is a very big deal.

But what else are they going to be useful for? For breaking ECC doesn't help humanity. It doesn't bring anything. It only destroys.

EDIT: for example I read stuff like: "Estimates are about three years to break a single 256 bit EC key on a 10 000 qbits quantum computer". What's a 10 000 qbits quantum computer going to be used for when everybody shall have moved to quantum-resistant algos?