Quantum computing is poised to revolutionize industries from drug development to cybersecurity, with the global market projected to reach $15 billion by 2030.
Quantum computers represent a breakthrough comparable to the move from valves to transistors in computer engineering. It doesn't just mean processing data faster; it means processing data in ways that redefine our understanding of what data is and what can be done with it.
Enter quantum computing and its mind-bending ability to harness strange quantum properties, such as tunneling and superposition, in order to solve certain complex problems in seconds rather than eons. A quantum computer, on the other hand, stores and processes data as "qubits" – quantum bits that can, somewhat spookily, exist in both states simultaneously – as well as any of the infinite number of points in between them.Watchdog Group Sues Trump Officials Over Signal War Plans Chat
Its successor, Xuchongzhi-3, has just been unveiled, and with 105 qubits, it is believed to be one of the fastest quantum computers built so far.Beginning as a Canadian research startup, D-Wave was one of the first groups to capitalize on the commercial implications of quantum computing. It launched the first commercially available quantum computer – D-Wave One – in 2011.
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