Boson Sampling, a non-universal computing paradigm, has resulted in impressive claims of quantum supremacy. ORCA Computing have developed a
Boson Sampling, a non-universal computing paradigm, has resulted in impressive claims of quantum supremacy. ORCA Computing have developed a time-bin interferometer (TBI) that claims to use the principles of boson sampling to solve a number of computational problems including optimisation and generative adversarial networks. We solve a dominating set problem with a surveillance use case on the ORCA TBI simulator to benchmark the use of these devices against classical algorithms. Simulation has been used to consider the optimal performance of the computing paradigm without having to factor in noise, errors and scaling limitations. We show that the ORCA TBI is capable of solving moderately sized (n<250) dominating set problems with comparable success to linear programming and greedy methods. Wall clock timing shows that the simulator has worse scaling than the classical methods, but this is unlikely to carry over to the physical device where the outputs are measured rather than calculated. Comment: Submitted to UCNC 2025