IBM, quantum foundry
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Quantum computing is a “derivative play” on the AI revolution, says Dan Ives—plus IBM’s turnaround upside and $2B Trump grants fueling QTUM stocks.
The U.S. Department of Commerce will invest $2 billion into quantum chip foundries and startups as the "Q-Day" Bitcoin threat nears.
IBM and the U.S. Department of Commerce (DoC) announced a Letter of Intent (LOI) to build an American quantum chip foundry, securing the nation’s global quantum leadership and fueling the country’s growing quantum ecosystem.
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,
The standard assumption is that Q-Day, when a cryptographically relevant quantum computer will be able to break today's encryption, is still several years away. However, this misses the point.
Now is the perfect time to develop skills, research new security protocols, and experiment with potential use cases.
The Benchmark Company, a subsidiary of StoneX Group Inc. (“Stone X”; NASDAQ: SNEX), is pleased to announce the inaugural Benchmark-StoneX Quantum Computing Summit, a two-day, in-person event on Tuesday,
Overview: Qiskit remains the world’s most widely used quantum SDK for research and enterprise projects.AI and quantum integration have increased demand for plat
Quantum computing shares popped as the U.S. government announced plans to award grants to nine firms operating in the space.