As the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology draws to a close, Margaret Harris revisits some of the year’s ...
The sheer pace of quantum activity from tech firms in 2025 would have been unthinkable even five years ago, says Catherine ...
The race to harness quantum mechanics for computing power is finally colliding with the real economy. After a century of ...
Quantum computers are shifting from lab curiosities into real machines that can already outperform classical systems on ...
With global initiatives, new funding rounds, the achievement of key technical milestones and the portent of scientific breakthroughs, the International Year of Quantum is off to an auspicious start.
Professor Keisuke Fujii, a leading researcher in quantum science at The University of Osaka, has been named among the Quantum ...
Quantum communication saw major progress, including longer-distance demonstrations and systems that operate closer to ...
The US administration is banking on public-private partnerships and an expanded workforce to deliver progress, but critics ...
This year will be a big one for quantum computing, at least according to the United Nations: 2025 is officially the “International Year of Quantum Science and Technology,” a worldwide initiative to ...
Carriers of information come in different forms and behave differently. Think of ink on newspapers, sound waves in classrooms and pixels on TV, monitors and smartphones. Think of tiny transistors on ...
Step aside, artificial intelligence. Another transformative technology with the potential to reshape industries and reorder ...