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 ...
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.
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Marco Chiappetta is a technologist who covers semiconductors and AI. Back in June, IBM announced an ambitious plan to deliver the ...
Artificial intelligence has proven to be a transformative technology, yet quantum computing could be bigger. Quantum computers harness the properties of quantum mechanics to perform calculations in a ...
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.” ...
IBM disclosed details on its Nighthawk and Loon quantum processors. The company expects quantum advantage next year and fault-tolerance by 2029. IBM also demonstrated ...
IBM just announced that 2026 will mark the first time a quantum computer outperforms classical systems. Not in a lab ...
The decades-long quest to create a practical quantum computer is accelerating as major tech companies say they are closing in on designs that could scale from small lab experiments to full working ...
Quantum computing is still in its infancy, with D-Wave Quantum and IBM competing to deliver tech capable of widespread adoption. D-Wave's annealing quantum computers can surpass the abilities of ...