News

IBM laid out a detailed plan for a large-scale machine in June, declaring it was on track to build one by the end of the ...
Current systems operate with fewer than 200 qubits—quantum computing’s basic building blocks. Industrial applications require ...
In the race to build a workable quantum computer — a dream at the intersection of advanced physics and computer science since ...
Tech giants claims that the decades-long race to build a workable quantum computer may finally be entering its home stretch.
Tech giants IBM and Google are on the brink of achieving practical quantum computing, transforming lab experiments into ...
After a series of recent technical breakthroughs, the creation of full-scale quantum computers may be possible by the end of the decade, Richard ...
Major tech firms race to build full-scale quantum computers by 2030.Scaling qubits faces key challenges like interference and ...
Overview: IBM follows a clear roadmap aiming for 100,000 qubits and fosters an open-access quantum development ecosystem.Google focuses on bold breakthroughs an ...
IBM said Google had essentially rigged the race by not tapping the full power of modern supercomputers. “This threshold has not been met,” IBM’s blog post says.
So IBM decided to drop the bomb on Google -- Big Blue will offer a basic email service for $36 per seat, undercutting the latter's $50 a head Apps pricing. A Gartner analyst called it "trouble for ...
IBM is going after Google Apps Premier hard and has the pricing to show it’s serious. Big Blue is announcing the general availability of LotusLive iNotes, a cloud email, calendar and contact ...
IBM is now selling a bare-bones e-mail service to companies for $36 annually per worker, undercutting a more comprehensive package of software applications that Google sells for $50 per user annually.