Advances like these lead me to believe that useful quantum computing is inevitable and increasingly imminent. And that’s good news, because the hope is that they will be able to perform calculations that no amount of AI or classical computation could ever achieve.
Nvidia’s CEO, Jensen Huang, believes quantum computing is 20 years away from being “very useful”That seems a very pessimistic outlook A new IDTechEx report
Quantum computing has been an up-and-down investment theme over the past few months. The rage kicked off when Alphabet ( GOOG 1.16%) ( GOOGL 1.13%) announced a breakthrough with its Willow quantum computing chip, and any stock associated with quantum computing rose on the news of the announcement.
Quantum computing is drawing more attention now than generative AI did before ChatGPT’s release. This sparks big questions about what QC could achieve in 2025.
The model was developed by the Chinese AI startup DeepSeek, which claims that R1 matches or even surpasses OpenAI’s ChatGPT o1 on multiple key benchmarks but operates at a fraction of the cost.
Quantum computing stocks were red-hot recently, but Jensen Huang just offered optimistic investors a reality check.
Can you explain quantum computing and the investment opportunities in the sector? Sylvia: Quantum computing is one of the most disruptive and potentially revolutionary developments of our time. It defines the 4th Industrial Revolution.
Recently, Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang made a head-turning, market-moving comment regarding his thoughts on quantum computing. Stocks in this space sold off in response. Even so ...
In a recent episode of Trader Talk, Sylvia Jablonski, CEO and CIO of Defiance ETFs, pushed back against Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s claim that quantum computing is still 15 to 30 years away. Huang’s statement,
Read here for an analysis of the surge of quantum computing stocks, focusing on Rigetti Computing's unique approach and potential long-term gains. See more.
The chip has broken new ground in a key random circuit sampling benchmark, an important development in Google's roadmap for fault-tolerant quantum computing.