This week I am very happy because for the first time we have a font that allows us to create circuits right in Word (bye bye, LaTeX!) thanks to Mark and then folks at Quantum Village. Brian (Lenahan) publishes another book (at this rate he’ll have more books than quantum coputers available out there). And Brian (Siegelwax) gives us his complete “menu” on quantum tools out there. A great interview to Antia Lamas, head of the Quantum Networks team at AWS who says that in just a few years, we will forget about qubits and circuits (A view that Krupansky shares in his article as well). We will just code the way we do Java today. Fluxonium makes its day with some very interesting applications. PQShield announces collaboration with NCCoE. Quantinuum releases a new version of Lambeq for QNLP as well as a proposal on a framework to make blockchain quantum resistant while Thales makes a great summary of how the EuroQCI consortium works and updates. BT makes more public their plans on quantum comms and its effect on Telcos. A new type of Superconductor has been apparently discovered, but not the one that SpinQ (the desktop - room temperature device) released with 20 qubits just this week. Japan adds $30M to its support on quantum applications with a focus on Finance. GPT4 (that has NOT created this summary) has passed one of Aaronson exams (surely has got a better grade than the one I would have got). We top the week up with important improvements on qubit’s coherence times by Yale researchers and a new paper on QEC, which is the hot topic today.
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The Week in Quantum Computing - April 17th
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This week I am very happy because for the first time we have a font that allows us to create circuits right in Word (bye bye, LaTeX!) thanks to Mark and then folks at Quantum Village. Brian (Lenahan) publishes another book (at this rate he’ll have more books than quantum coputers available out there). And Brian (Siegelwax) gives us his complete “menu” on quantum tools out there. A great interview to Antia Lamas, head of the Quantum Networks team at AWS who says that in just a few years, we will forget about qubits and circuits (A view that Krupansky shares in his article as well). We will just code the way we do Java today. Fluxonium makes its day with some very interesting applications. PQShield announces collaboration with NCCoE. Quantinuum releases a new version of Lambeq for QNLP as well as a proposal on a framework to make blockchain quantum resistant while Thales makes a great summary of how the EuroQCI consortium works and updates. BT makes more public their plans on quantum comms and its effect on Telcos. A new type of Superconductor has been apparently discovered, but not the one that SpinQ (the desktop - room temperature device) released with 20 qubits just this week. Japan adds $30M to its support on quantum applications with a focus on Finance. GPT4 (that has NOT created this summary) has passed one of Aaronson exams (surely has got a better grade than the one I would have got). We top the week up with important improvements on qubit’s coherence times by Yale researchers and a new paper on QEC, which is the hot topic today.