You don't need people to chew the knowledge for you and put it in your mouth.
Go to the library and dig into it. Start with the solid foundation - there are about 3 dozen topics that you must know before you think of getting into the quantum computing part. Off the top of my head you need:
Math
-Linear, Differential Equations, Partial Diff, Discrete, Statistics, Probablities, Multivariable (Vector analysis), Conformal mappings, Complex analysis, Topology
Physics
-E&M, Quantum, Statistical mechanics, Nuclear/Modern, lots of labs and knowledge of equipment
Computer Science
-objected oriented programming, combinatorial optimization, computational geometry, data structures, algorithm design - preferably in C/C++, Visual, or .NET
Electrical Engineering
-Circuits, Analog & Digital processing, EM fields, plasmas, fusions, VLSI, sensors, solid states, lines, fields, guided waves, nonlinear analysis, nonlinear optics, em diffraction & radiation, coherent optics, holography, estimation theory, chaos theory
You can go to any big university and major in either Physics, CS, EE, or Math and after you've spent 2 years in your basic classes covering aforementioned stuff, you can do your own research on Quantum computing. You won't be the guy that invented first ever quantum computer - so don't get your hopes up. However you might be one of the many guys who will work on hard algorithm and problems, optimizing and integrating new methods.