- IBM Says It’s Cracked Quantum Error Correction - IEEE Spectrum
IBM’s new architecture is a significant advance over its previous technology, says Mark Horvath, a vice president analyst at Gartner, who was briefed in advance of the announcement The new chip
- Breakthrough: IBM’s Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computer
IBM says it’s overcoming this challenge with new error-correction techniques for fault-tolerant systems Screenshot from IBM Research’s video “Realizing large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum
- IBM aims to build the world’s first large-scale, error . . .
IBM announced detailed plans today to build an error-corrected quantum computer with significantly more computational capability than existing machines by 2028 It hopes to make the computer
- IBM now describing its first error-resistant quantum compute . . .
To get its chips and error-correction scheme in sync, IBM has made two key advances (The company says that one of the dozen logical qubits in each unit will be used to mediate entanglement
- The science is solved: IBM to build monster 10,000-qubit . . .
The new research, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, describes IBM's quantum low-density parity check (LDPC) codes — a novel fault-tolerance paradigm that researchers say will allow quantum
- IBM bets on novel error-correction for scalable quantum . . .
Abbreviated as LDPC, the error-correcting coding method is the star element of IBM’s novel fault-tolerant architecture, dubbed “the bicycle architecture ”
- IBM claims to have ‘only realistic path’ to quantum computing
The new quantum computer, named IBM Quantum Starling, will be built at the IBM quantum computing data center in Poughkeepsie, N Y , and will have 200 logical qubits, which translates to about
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