HSBC used IBM's quantum computers to improve a process involved in algorithm bond trading. The collaboration demonstrated that pairing quantum computers with classical techniques can provide ...
IBM announced plans for its IBM Quantum Starling, a fault-tolerant quantum computer, that brings quantum computing a step closer in a market that has long promised revolutionary capabilities while ...
IBM CEO Arvind Krishna just made a bold quantum computing pledge that could reshape U.S. tech dominance.
Quantum computing is poised to redefine technology, offering unprecedented computational capabilities to address problems beyond the reach of classical systems. Jerry Chow, an IBM Fellow and Director ...
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 ...
Genya Crossman is a lifelong learner passionate about helping people understand and use quantum computing to solve the world’s most complex problems. Crossman, an IEEE member, is a quantum strategy ...
IonQ uses individual ions (charged atoms) to make its qubits. The approach has advantages over other methods being pursued -- and one of the biggest is that it enables the company's devices to operate ...
The Basque Government and IBM unveiled the first IBM Quantum System Two in Europe at the IBM-Euskadi Quantum Computational Center in San Sebastián, Spain. Credit: IBM. El ordenador Quantum System Two ...
As quantum computing inches closer to practical, real-world applications, investors are turning their attention to the companies leading the charge in this transformative technology. Rigetti Computing ...
International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM) has been working on quantum computing technology for decades. The company's quantum computing roadmap calls for a demonstration of quantum advantage, where ...
Quantum advantage is the point at which a quantum computer can solve real-world problems more accurately, cheaply, or efficiently than conventional computers. Let's compare D-Wave and IBM to see which ...