Check out the new Blog article by Benjamin Skuse, where he looks at the various current attempts to create viable qubits for quantum computing.

Microsoft says that a quantum computer capable of solving challenging scientific and commercial problems will ultimately require at least one million stable qubits that can perform one quintillion operations. But there are literally dozens of highly promising ways to build a qubit. Is there a qubit out there that Goldilocks would judge to be ‘just right’? This week at the HLFF Blog, science journalist and mathematician Benjamin Skuse explores that question.

Check out his article here:

HLFF Blog

Image caption: An array of Sycamore chips being prepared for preliminary electrical testing. Image credits: Google AI Quantum.