We discuss some seemingly paradoxical yet valid effects of quantum physics in information processing. Firstly, we argue that
the act of “doing nothing„ on part of an entangled quantum system is a highly non-trivial operation and that it is the essential
ingredient underlying the computational speedup in the known quantum algorithms. Secondly, we show that the watched pot effect
of quantum measurement theory gives the following novel computational possibility: suppose that we have a quantum computer
with an on/off switch, programmed ready to solve a decision problem. Then (in certain circumstances) the mere fact that the
computer would have given the answer if it were run, is enough for us to learn the answer, even though the computer is in fact not run.