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Intel isn't the only company working to make quantum computing practical.
Researchers from a university and Google demonstrate a crucial error-correction step needed to make quantum computing practical.
That, says the IEEE, will "make quantum computing more accessible to a larger group of contributors, including developers of software and hardware, materials scientists, mathematicians, physicists, engineers, climate scientists, biologists and geneticists". The project's only just starting, but it sounds as if it's going to be very useful.
Many thousands of qubits would be necessary to make quantum computing useful.
In a qubit, the entire sphere can hold innumerable other states and relating those states between qubits enables certain correlations that make quantum computing well-suited for a variety of specific tasks that classical computing cannot accomplish.
But the very qualities that make quantum computing such an appealing way to store and process information also make its components exceedingly difficult to work with.
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IBM, Google, Intel, and others are all racing to build the first practical quantum computer, which is why we made quantum computing one of our 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2017.
The feat is a step toward making quantum computing devices from silicon, the same material used in today's smartphones and computers.
GAZETTE: What makes quantum computing so exciting?
Researchers at the University of Sydney and Dartmouth College said they have found a new way to design quantum memory, a key element in making quantum computing a reality.
On the potential applications of Haroche and Wineland's work: Quantum computing is still quite a long way away from large scale quantum device, but both of these groups have indicated the necessary ingredients that would make a logic circuit obey the laws of quantum mechanics and that's what we really want to be able to do.
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