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The algorithm, designed to test the quantum computer’s capabilities, has no known useful applications, but that’s beside the point, according to Hartmut Neven, founder of Google Quantum AI.
Google Quantum AI Founder and Lead, Hartmut Neven, wrote an extensive blog explaining the new Willow quantum chip and its journey beginning over 10 years ago when Neven founded Google Quantum AI ...
Google Quantum AI's Hartmut Neven (L) and Anthony Megrant (R) examine a cryostat refrigerator for cooling quantum computing chips at Google's Quantum AI lab in Santa Barbara, California, U.S ...
Google Quantum AI’s Hartmut Neven (L) and Anthony Megrant (R) examine a cryostat refrigerator for cooling quantum computing chips at Google’s Quantum AI lab in Santa Barbara, California, U.S ...
While Google’s new chip called Willow has been noted for advancing the field of quantum computing, experts question the current real-world uses.
"We are past the break even point," Hartmut Neven, who leads the Google Quantum AI unit, said in an interview. In 2019, ...
And Hartmut Neven, Google Quantum AI founder, says the only explanation is the influence of a parallel universe. Physicists have often argued another parallel universe exists ...
"We’re optimistic that within five years we’ll see real-world applications that are possible only on quantum computers," founder and lead of Google Quantum AI Hartmut Neven said in a statement.
This month in Scientific American, Hartmut Neven, the founder and manger of Google’s Quantum Artificial Intelligence lab, co-authored an opinion piece containing the following assertion: “You ...
That’s exponentially faster than Google’s stated performance five years ago, when it said it could solve a 10,000-year task in minutes. The algorithm, designed to test the quantum computer’s ...
Google on Monday said that it has overcome a key challenge in quantum computing with a new ... “We are past the break even point,” Hartmut Neven, who leads the Google Quantum AI unit, ...