Quantum hardware has finally crossed a psychological threshold: it is no longer a science project in search of a purpose, it is a working tool that large companies and governments are starting to use.
Part 1 of this series explained what quantum computers actually are. Not just faster versions of regular computers, but a fundamentally different kind of machine that exploits the weird rules of ...
Researchers in Japan have developed quantum multi-programming auto mode, a function that automatically runs quantum programs ...
Microsoft’s latest quantum computing chip, an InAs-Pb tetron device, recorded a characteristic parity switching time of ...
The traditionally skeptical MIT scientist believes the technology’s breakthrough is closer than expected, though its ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Artificial Intelligence (“AI”) continues to command ...
The chip industry is the most complex that you could imagine, and quantum computing, intrinsically, is based on some of the ...
I see three investment lanes for quantum computing: pure plays like IonQ (IONQ) and Rigetti (RGTI); the "Magnificent Seven" giants with quantum divisions; and infrastructure picks-and-shovels. Which ...
Jacob Benestad in front of an experimental setup in the laboratory at the Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen. This setup is similar to the one used during the group's experiments at the ...
Quantum computing seems to pop up in the news pretty often these days. You’ve probably seen quantum chips gracing your feeds and their odd, steampunk-ish cooling systems in the pages of magazines and ...