Trump Signs Quantum Executive Orders
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Four decades ago, physicists were theorizing that the mind-bending mechanics of quantum physics could be harnessed to make a new kind of computer that’s exponentially more powerful than conventional machines.
This article is part of a package on the future of quantum computing. Read about the most promising applications of these machines here and see an illustrated field guide to qubits here. Inside a low-slung building in an office park near the southeastern edge of the San Francisco Bay,
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is expanding its quantum computing partnership with QuEra. The companies announced an expanded strategic collaboration this week to bring Libra, the company's first fault-tolerant quantum computer capable of tackling scientifically relevant problems,
Quantum computing firm QuEra says it plans to make a fault-tolerant quantum computer and offer it to users through the cloud in 2028, which will require a real leap in engineering
Planned Libra system aims to feature more than 256 error-corrected logical qubits and target Megaquop-scale performance
QuEra Computing today announced Libra, its first fault-tolerant quantum computer, arriving on Amazon Braket in 2028, alongside a deepened multi-year technical and go-to-market partnership with Amazon Web Services (AWS) to bring fault-tolerant computing to customers worldwide.
QuEra Computing has announced plans to launch its first fault-tolerant quantum computer, named Libra, by 2028.
Amazon Web Services has unveiled its Ocelot chip based on a hardware-efficient quantum computing architecture. Fernando Brandão and Oskar Painter of AWS said in a blog post that the pair of silicon microchips that compose the Ocelot logical-qubit memory ...
The partners are working together to bring the world’s first fault-tolerant quantum computers to the AWS cloud within the next two years. By 2028, AWS promised today, it will make it possible for researchers to tackle some of the world’s most complex scientific problems using quantum machines with unprecedented computing power.
February has been a hot month for quantum computing, the other week we had the unveiling of Microsoft's Majorana 1, which made breakthroughs in error resistance with ...
Quantum computers could be made with fewer overall components, thanks to technology inspired by Schrödinger's cat. A team of researchers from Amazon Web Services has used "bosonic cat qubits," to improve the ability of quantum computers to correct errors.
