The chip has broken new ground in a key random circuit sampling benchmark, an important development in Google's roadmap for fault-tolerant quantum computing.
Quantum computing remains something of a holy grail in the world of technology: It promises a huge leap in computing power, but only if someone can figure
Global Quantum Intelligence co-founder Doug Finke in an IBD interview talks about key developments for quantum computing stocks, including AI and cybersecurity.
This Is Most Promising Quantum Computing Stock
One of these companies' quantum platforms can complete calculations in minutes that would take today's supercomputers longer than the age of the universe to solve.
Advances like these lead me to believe that useful quantum computing is inevitable and increasingly imminent. And that’s good news, because the hope is that they will be able to perform calculations that no amount of AI or classical computation could ever achieve.
Quantum computing has been an up-and-down investment theme over the past few months. The rage kicked off when Alphabet ( GOOG 1.16%) ( GOOGL 1.13%) announced a breakthrough with its Willow quantum computing chip, and any stock associated with quantum computing rose on the news of the announcement.
Quantum computing is drawing more attention now than generative AI did before ChatGPT’s release. This sparks big questions about what QC could achieve in 2025.
Quantum computing offers mind-boggling problem-solving potential. Here are four ways to buy quantum computing stocks.
The stock market roared higher last year, and some of the biggest gainers operate in one specific field: artificial intelligence (AI). The technology promises to revolutionize many industries -- from healthcare to automobiles -- with innovations such as AI-powered medical devices and autonomous driving systems.
Stocks of quantum computing companies jumped Wednesday after Microsoft declared this as “the year to become quantum-ready,” adding “we are at the advent of the reliable quantum computing era.” Shares of Rigetti Computing and D-Wave Quantum were both up more than 22 percent.
Also last month, the San Francisco-based quantum startup BlueQubit Inc. closed on $10 million in funding, shortly after SandboxAQ raised a whopping $300 million to pursue the idea of “large quantitative models,” which are artificial intelligence models that run on quantum hardware.