Quantum computing has long lived in the realm of lab demos and bold PowerPoint slides, but two of the industry’s biggest players now say the first truly useful machines are less than five years away.
In the world of quantum computing, some of the world’s most important tech giants are striving to achieve a permanent advantage over classical computing, solving problems that simply cannot be solved ...
Physicist Jay Gambetta, at IBM’s lab in Yorktown Heights, New York, explains how microwaves orchestrate a solution on a quantum chip: “Think of each qubit as a line in music. You’re creating notes.” ...
In less than five years, we will have access to an error-free quantum supercomputer – so says IBM. The firm has presented a roadmap for building this machine, called Starling, slated to be available ...
IBM moves closer to fault-tolerant quantum advantage with the launch of new hardware and software for scalable quantum processing. YORKTOWN HEIGHTS, NEW YORK — IBM is continuing its journey to scaling ...
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The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and IBM are renewing the IBM-Illinois Discovery Accelerator Institute, a ...
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -IBM announced on Wednesday it has built a new experimental quantum computing chip called Loon that demonstrates it hit a key milestone toward making useful quantum computers ...
IBM (IBM) generated over $60B in annual revenue from cloud computing and AI to fund quantum R&D without existential risk. IBM announced two advanced quantum processors this week including the ...
IBM Corp. today announced two new quantum processors at its annual Quantum Developer Conference that are aimed at delivering scalable quantum computation capabilities next year and fault-tolerant ...
Rigetti is making advancements, but its quantum computing systems are error-prone, and the company is burning through cash. IBM, meanwhile, is a quantum-first company supported by its legacy business.