What if the most complex problems plaguing industries today—curing diseases, optimizing global supply chains, or even securing digital communication—could be solved in a fraction of the time it takes ...
As the industrial sector accelerates toward innovation, the pressure to do so sustainably and cost-effectively has never been greater. From energy-intensive artificial intelligence workloads to ...
Quantum computing is something of an enigma. For many analysts, advocates and evangelists across the technology industry, the quantum mixture has been quite maturely and meticulously defined; all ...
Equal1 has just revealed a major step forward in quantum computing. The company’s new machine, Bell-1, is changing the way people think about quantum technology. Rather than needing a special lab, ...
A gold superconducting quantum computer hangs against a black background. Quantum computers, like the one shown here, could someday allow chemists to solve problems that classical computers can’t.
Richard Feynman, the iconic physicist and one of the progenitors of quantum computing, famously said in 1981: “Nature isn’t classical, dammit, and if you want to make a simulation of nature, you’d ...
There are currently about 80 companies across the world manufacturing quantum computing hardware. Because I report on quantum computing, I have had a chance to watch it grow as an industry from up ...