Quantum computers could expose our digital secrets – but there are much better reasons to build them
Digital secrets are protected by encryption, which converts meaningful data into an unintelligible form. If quantum computers ...
Moth, the London-based quantum computing company, has launched Quantum Backrooms, an open-access game and the world's first quantum consumer product, inviting anyone and everyone to explore a virtual ...
The race to build the first truly useful quantum computer just got more exciting. A quantum computer made from extremely cold atoms has now passed some of the most important milestones towards ...
Quantum computing could lead to revolutions in cryptography, materials design and telecommunications. But fulfilling those promises could be many years away ...
Morning Overview on MSN
The Department of Energy just asked industry to deliver a fault-tolerant quantum computer with 150 to 250 logical qubits by 2028 — the federal race to commercial s…
Somewhere inside the federal government’s sprawling contracting portal, SAM.gov, a new listing appeared this spring that ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
Scientists solved an 'impossible' quantum puzzle with a personal computer
A visual representation of tensor networks. (Lucy Reading-Ikkanda/Simons Foundation) Efforts to advance quantum computing are ...
The promise of quantum computers appears to be that they will upend modern computing as we know it. With exceptional computational power, they’ll be performing feats unimaginable for any classical ...
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