IBM Says New Quantum Computing Tech Will 'Explore New Frontiers of Science'
IBM Says New Quantum Computing Tech Will 'Explore New Frontiers of Science'
IBM Says New Quantum Computing Tech , Will 'Explore New Frontiers of Science'.
On December 4, IBM unveiled a new quantum computing chip and machine the company says could be the foundation for much larger and faster systems. .
'The Guardian' reports that IBM's Quantum System Two, which utilizes three "Heron" cryogenically cooled chips, comes amid fierce competition to reach a breakthrough in quantum computing.
Microsoft, Google, Baidu and others are all racing to develop machines that rely on quantum bits, which can be both one and zero at the same, unlike traditional computing.
Microsoft, Google, Baidu and others are all racing to develop machines that rely on quantum bits, which can be both one and zero at the same, unlike traditional computing.
Microsoft, Google, Baidu and others are all racing to develop machines that rely on quantum bits, which can be both one and zero at the same, unlike traditional computing.
According to IBM, the company has developed a new way of connecting chips within quantum machines, and then connecting multiple machines together.
The technology could be used to produce fully-functioning quantum computing machines by 2033.
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IBM said that it plans to use the new quantum technology in its artificial intelligence platform, watsonx.
We are firmly within the era in which quantum computers are being used as a tool to explore new frontiers of science, Dario Gil, IBMโs director of research, via 'The Guardian'.
IBM's director of research, Dario Gil, told CBS '60 Minutes' that quantum computing could be used to solve problems that would take current computers millions of years to complete.
The beauty of it, is that not even a million or a billion of those supercomputers connected together could do the calculations of these future machines, Dario Gil, IBMโs director of research, via 'The Guardian'.
'The Guardian' reports that IBM also said that one of its advanced new machines has already been installed at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio.