Quantum computing is a revolutionary form of computing that uses the principles of quantum mechanics to perform calculations that would be infeasible or impossible for classical computers. Unlike ...
Quantum computing has long felt like a perpetual promise — a mysteriously powerful technology that’s always “about 10 years away.” If you tuned it out, you weren’t alone. But something has shifted ...
Researchers from Cleveland Clinic, RIKEN, and IBM have carried out the largest quantum-classical chemistry ...
What is it about quantum computers that makes them more powerful than conventional machines? A new experiment shows that the property of “quantum contextuality” may be a key ingredient. Quantum ...
Quantum technology is moving from lab curiosity to commercial reality, and the shift is starting to redraw the boundaries of entire sectors rather than just speeding up a few algorithms. The next wave ...
Building a utility-scale quantum computer that can crack one of the most vital cryptosystems—elliptic curves—doesn’t require nearly the resources anticipated just a year or two ago, two independently ...
Integrating quantum computers into U.S. world-class supercomputers is now a strategic imperative for U.S. technological leadership in the next era of computing. Hybrid systems will synergize classical ...
Ginna Raahauge of WWT talks us through quantum strategy and what you as a CTO should be doing to prepare your organisation ...
Quantum computing has long struggled with a practical problem: even as hardware improves, building useful applications remains slow, expensive, and highly specialized. New York-based Haiqu is ...