Collective Intelligence

The first interactive platform that brings together innovation players around common interest.

Google’s Willow chip a milestone in Quantum Computing

Google’s 105-qubit quantum chip Willow demonstrates exponential error correction and performs computations surpassing classical supercomputers. Experts estimate breaking RSA encryption would need at least 4 million qubits, but Willow is far from that, with quantum impacts still years away.

Our comment :

The quantum race balances qubit count and quality. Google leads with high-quality qubits and error correction, the more qubits are used in Willow, the more errors are reduced. This is crucial for complex problems; a strategy IBM also pursues for real-world quantum applications.
Regis Hamelin, CTO and deep tech expert

Google’s Willow chip a milestone in Quantum Computing

Google’s 105-qubit quantum chip Willow demonstrates exponential error correction and performs computations surpassing classical supercomputers. Experts estimate breaking RSA encryption would need at least 4 million qubits, but Willow is far from that, with quantum impacts still years away.

BLUMORPHO comment :

The quantum race balances qubit count and quality. Google leads with high-quality qubits and error correction, the more qubits are used in Willow, the more errors are reduced. This is crucial for complex problems; a strategy IBM also pursues for real-world quantum applications.
Regis Hamelin, CTO and deep tech expert

Google’s Willow chip a milestone in Quantum Computing

Google’s 105-qubit quantum chip Willow demonstrates exponential error correction and performs computations surpassing classical supercomputers. Experts estimate breaking RSA encryption would need at least 4 million qubits, but Willow is far from that, with quantum impacts still years away.

BLUMORPHO comment :

The quantum race balances qubit count and quality. Google leads with high-quality qubits and error correction, the more qubits are used in Willow, the more errors are reduced. This is crucial for complex problems; a strategy IBM also pursues for real-world quantum applications.
Regis Hamelin, CTO and deep tech expert

Our previous articles