DARPA chose Diraq and Silicon Quantum Computing for the Quantum Benchmarking Initiative, which will assess whether participating companies could create a useful quantum computer in under a decade.
When Apple Vision Pro was first unveiled to the world, Apple repeatedly emphasized it was a ‘spatial computer,’ not a VR headset. Demos showed it doing computer-y things, and the press release claimed ...
Australia has committed approximately A$940 million (US$617 million) to support PsiQuantum, a Silicon Valley-based quantum computing company, in its efforts to develop the world's first "useful" ...
AI can help discover new materials, but we’ll need quantum computers to really move the needle. On January 8, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang jolted the stock market by saying that practical quantum computing ...
Add Popular Science (opens in a new tab) More information Adding us as a Preferred Source in Google by using this link indicates that you would like to see more of our content in Google News results.
DARPA is evaluating whether a useful quantum computer can be built by 2033. There are three stages to DARPA’s evaluation – A, B and C. Stage A is to describe a utility-scale quantum computer concept ...
The Australian government has announced a pledge of approximately A$940 million (US$617 million) to PsiQuantum, a quantum computing start-up company based in Silicon Valley. Half of the funding will ...
The silicon photonic quantum computer being developed by PsiQuantum could enable a range of previously unachievable tasks across all industries. (Image courtesy of Dr Jeremy O’Brien) As quantum ...