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As quantum computing moves closer to practical implementation, there are three areas in particular to keep an eye on.
Overview: IBM follows a clear roadmap aiming for 100,000 qubits and fosters an open-access quantum development ...
Until the next time. However, behind the scenes, these breakthroughs are not forgotten, and according to IBM, there is now a clear roadmap to building a practical and fault-tolerant quantum computer.
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IBM says it will build a practical quantum supercomputer by 2029arXiv DOI: 10.48550/arXiv.2506.03094, DOI: 10.48550/arXiv.2506.01779 IBM says it will build a practical quantum supercomputer by 2029 A rendering of IBM's proposed quantum supercomputer IBM ...
IBM Quantum roadmap, processors, and infrastructure outline clear path to IBM Quantum Starling, expected to be first large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer Breakthrough research defines key ...
IBM, which already operates a large, global fleet of quantum computers, is releasing a new Quantum Roadmap that outlines its plans to build out a practical, fault-tolerant quantum computer. “IBM is ...
On June 10, 2025, IBM released an updated IBM Quantum Roadmap to detail its path to IBM Quantum Starling, the world’s first large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum system, located in Poughkeepsie.
Starling, which will feature 200 logical qubits and 100 million quantum gates, will be built in 2028 and deliver fault-tolerance by 2029, according to IBM's roadmap.
IBM, which already operates a large, global fleet of quantum computers, is releasing a new Quantum Roadmap that outlines its plans to build out a practical, fault-tolerant quantum computer.
IBM is taking a modular approach on its path to the holy grail of quantum computing. This year, IBM will release Nighthawk, its new quantum process with 120 qubits and 5,000 quantum gates.
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