Interesting Engineering on MSN
Harvard’s 448-qubit breakthrough brings fault-tolerant quantum supercomputing closer
A new fault-tolerant architecture using 448 atomic qubits suppresses errors past the critical point needed for scaling.
Drawing on a background in law, public policy and cybersecurity program leadership, Judith Borts brings a wide-angle view to Canada’s escalating digital risks. In this Expert Insights Q&A, she ...
For years quantum technology seemed exciting in theory but not much good in practice. Now the ability to combine qubits—bits ...
Though still in its early stages, quantum computing is predicted to have the ability to solve problems that are currently too complex or energy-intensive to tackle.
Live Science on MSN
Quantum computing will make cryptography obsolete. But computer scientists are working to make them unhackable.
When quantum computers become commonplace, current cryptographic systems will become obsolete. Scientists are racing to get ...
A study led by the University of Oxford has identified a surprising source of entropy in quantum timekeeping—the act of measurement itself. In a study published in Physical Review Letters, scientists ...
On the second day of the IOP conference at the RI, I chaired a debate that brought together four future leaders of the ...
Record capital expenditures and data-center planning are running up against the ground truths of physical infrastructure.
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