[New] Imagine a world where someone could use a quantum computer to shut down the power grid or steal sensitive data.
TechAnnouncer
[New] As first reported by Quantum Zeitgeist, Microsoft has unveiled a novel family of four-dimensional geometric error-correction codes that could dramatically accelerate the development of practical quantum computers.
Quantum Zeitgeist
[New] 80% of companies believe that quantum computing will have a significant impact on their industry, with 45% expecting to adopt quantum computing technologies within the next five years.
SuperAGI
[New] The cybersecurity landscape in 2025 represents a critical inflection point where artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and advanced persistent threats converge to create unprecedented challenges and opportunities.
Maxthon | Privacy Private Browser
[New] Quantum computers could acquire the capability to break foundational RSA encryption algorithms as early as 2028, rendering the widespread adoption of robust post-quantum cryptography solutions absolutely critical and non-negotiable.
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[New] By 2025, we expect to see quantum computers being used to design new drugs, develop more efficient solar panels, and create stronger, lighter materials for aerospace and automotive applications.
TechAnnouncer
[New] In the next five years, quantum computing is likely to move from labs to applications, and the integration of AI and quantum computing is expected to become a trend, added Sun.
Borneo Post Online
[New] By 2035, quantum computing could be worth $28 billion to $72 billion, quantum communication could be worth $11 billion to $15 billion, and quantum sensing could be worth $7 billion to $10 billion - for a total of as much as $97 billion.
McKinsey & Company
[New] As quantum computing advances, traditional encryption methods, such as RSA and ECC, are at risk of being broken by quantum computers.
Security Boulevard
[New] A: PQC develops encryption algorithms resistant to quantum computer attacks, unlike current methods like RSA that quantum computers could break.
FreePixel Blog
[New] Quantum computers capable of breaking current encryption could emerge within the next 10-20 years.
FreePixel Blog
[New] With quantum computers expected to break traditional encryption within the next decade, organizations and governments are racing to adopt quantum-resilient infrastructure.
SEAL Semiconductors
[New] Quantum computing is at the cusp of change, with hybrid systems like Cuda Q expected to solve real-world problems sooner than previously anticipated.
Stocktwits
[New] After so many years of research and experimentation, IBM believes that in 2029 it will finally deliver a fault-tolerant quantum computer.
Forbes
We probably will not see a quantum computer powerful enough to crack RSA-2048 encryption until around 2055 to 2060, based on the current trends in quantum volume - a metric used to compare the quality of different quantum computers.
VentureBeat
Delivered by 2029, IBM Quantum Starling will be built in a new IBM Quantum Data Center in Poughkeepsie, New York and is expected to perform 20,000 times more operations than today's quantum computers.
The Integrator
With new quantum tools like Nvidia's CUDA-Q platform enabling quantum processing units to seamlessly integrate with classical GPUs, quantum computing now stands poised to address real-world problems far sooner than anticipated.
Qryptonic, LLC
Google late last year showed off a new quantum computing chip that it said could bring practical quantum computing closer to reality.
The Star
The computer, dubbed IBM Quantum Starling, will be built in a new data center in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and have 20,000 times more operations than current quantum computers.
eOption
IBM announced detailed plans today to build an error-corrected quantum computer with significantly more computational capability than existing machines by 2028.
MIT Technology Review
IBM has unveiled a new quantum computing architecture it says will slash the number of qubits required for error correction.
IEEE Spectrum
A sufficiently powerful quantum computer (theoretically possessing approximately 1 million stable qubits) could break standard 2048-bit RSA encryption in a matter of hours, a stark contrast to the billions of years that would be required by even the most powerful classical supercomputers.
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Last updated: 07 July 2025
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