US Quantum Push: Billions for Hardware, Utility Still Missing
Uncle Sam is pouring $2 billion into quantum computing hardware, signaling its strategic importance. The real challenge, however, lies in making these powerful machines actually useful.
Uncle Sam is pouring $2 billion into quantum computing hardware, signaling its strategic importance. The real challenge, however, lies in making these powerful machines actually useful.
PsiQuantum is set to receive a $100 million boost from the US government, aimed at accelerating quantum computing hardware development and bolstering the American semiconductor industry.
The race for quantum supremacy just got a massive infusion of cash. IBM and the US government are betting big on a new foundry, Anderon, to build the future of quantum computing.
The quest for a powerful, cost-effective permanent magnet without rare earth elements is a decade-long scientific and economic challenge. Now, quantum computing enters the fray.
Quantum computers are getting bigger, but connecting all the pieces is a nightmare. A new compiler called Chipmunq aims to untangle this mess for the chiplet era.
Scientists crammed video projection into a chip the size of a pinhead, blasting 68 million light spots per second. Quantum salvation? Or the kind of trick that never leaves the lab?
From superconducting circuits to trapped ions, the competing chip technologies racing to make quantum computing practical, and the enormous engineering challenges that remain.