Finland gets a second quantum computer
Published in PC Hardware


20-qubits

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland and IQM Quantum Computers have completed Finland’s second quantum computer.

IBM wants to build a 100,000-qubit quantum computer in 10 years
Published in News


Call of Duty specs will be high

IBM wants to build a 100,000-qubit quantum computing machine within the next 10 years, according to MIT Technology Review.

Boffins put Fibonacci sequence into a quantum computer
Published in News


Created a new type of matter, two time directions, and a surprised cat

Physicists shot a laser pulse sequence mimicking the Fibonacci sequence at a quantum computer and ended up creating a new phase of matter.

China makes a quantum computer streets ahead of the US
Published in News


We have more cats


Physicists in China claim they've constructed two quantum computers with performance speeds that outrival competitors in the US, debuting a superconducting machine, in addition to an even speedier one that uses light photons to obtain unprecedented results.

Amazon wants to build its own quantum computer
Published in PC Hardware


Your delivery is potentially dead or alive

Amazon is apparently building its own quantum computer.

IBM starts bringing quantum computers out of the lab
Published in PC Hardware


53-qubit quantum computer out in October

IBM is taking a major step forward in moving quantum computing use forward by opening its first IBM Quantum Computation Centre in New York.

US starts glorious ten year plan for Quantum computing
Published in AI


IBM, Intel, and Co to benefit

President Donald Trump took time from his tweeting on December 21 to sign a bi-partisan law on AI

Microsoft spins its quantum plans
Published in News


Written a language for a computer which does not exist

Microsoft is trying to be prepared for the new breed of quantum computers, even though a true quantum PC does not exist yet. 

Dutch government invests in Quantum research
Published in News


Potentially alive or dead market

The Dutch government is spending €135m to develop a potentially super-fast quantum computer.



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