Connect with us

Published

on

Microsoft’s Majorana 1 quantum computing chip

Microsoft

It doesn’t quite have the buzz of artificial intelligence, but quantum computing is having a moment of its own.

Some of the most powerful institutions in the world, including Google, Microsoft, Amazon, IBM and the U.S. government, are spending many millions of dollars in a race to develop and build the first practical quantum computer.

Startups focused on quantum technology attracted about $2 billion last year, according to a McKinsey & Co. report, as investors pile into an industry that could have nearly $100 billion in revenue within a decade.

There isn’t much business today, though. In total, quantum computing companies generated under $750 million in revenue in 2024, according to the same report.

But more and more, we’re hearing about a big breakthrough.

In the past year, Microsoft unveiled its first quantum chip, Google executives said the technology may only be five years away, Amazon showcased its error-correcting quantum processor and IBM outlined its plan to build a meaningful quantum computer by 2029.

Joining them are scores of smaller companies and universities working on the underlying mathematics, software or potential business model. Some of the companies are even publicly traded, and can see their stocks soar or collapse based on a kernel of news.

In January, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang sent quantum computing stocks reeling when he said 15 years was “on the early side” in considering how long it would be before quantum computing would be useful. He said at the time that 20 years was a time frame that “a whole bunch of us would believe.”

Two months later, he walked back the comments, but also expressed surprise that they moved markets, or that there were even markets to be moved.

“How could a quantum computer company be public?” Huang said in March.

New defense companies shaping the future of modern warfare: Quantum Systems Co-CEO

Right now, there isn’t anything useful that quantum computers can do. They’re purely for research.

But the promise is clear. If the technology works, it can crunch certain kinds of numbers and do some tasks that are currently impossible on a traditional computer, or that would require so much time that the universe would end before they were completed.

To imagine a quantum computer, you have to fundamentally change how you consider what it means to compute.

A traditional computer works because there are billions of transistors on every chip. Those transistors can be ones or zeros — on or off. In large numbers, transistors can represent nearly every number, refer to parts of the system’s memory, and do arithmetic. That’s how every computer in the world works today.

In a quantum computer, the system uses qubits instead of transistors. It’s far more complicated than ones and zeros. Whether qubits are on or off is determined by quantum mechanics, and all of the qubits are “entangled,” which means a change in one will affect the probability of the others.

Making qubits work can require significant infrastructure. For example, some quantum computers have to be operated at very cold temperatures, near absolute zero.

So far, a lot of the applications for quantum have to do with simulating chemistry and physics.

“Quantum computers will not be the compute of choice for every application, and that’s OK,” said Krysta Svore, Microsoft’s vice president of advanced quantum development. “Even if we just use quantum computers for material science and chemistry, 96% of the world’s manufactured goods rely on chemistry and material science.”

Encryption

There’s one well-understood use for quantum computing today: encryption. That’s why the U.S. government and others around the world are closely tracking the technology’s development. It matters for national defense.

“The fear is that quantum computers will be able to crack our digital secrets,” said John Young, operating chief at the Americas division of Quantum eMotion, a quantum security company.

Currently, most passwords, WhatsApp texts, financial transactions and other important messages are encrypted, which means they’re scrambled and can’t be read if the data is stolen or observed. But quantum computers will be able to factor numbers quickly, which could allow hackers or other attackers to efficiently find the codes needed to decrypt important secrets.

Security researchers worry about what they call Q-Day, or the day when an effective quantum computer is created. They predict chaos when passwords and encryption start to mysteriously fail.

“Alongside its potential benefits, quantum computing also poses significant risks to the economic and national security of the United States,” the Biden White House said in 2022, in a national security memo. A cryptographically relevant quantum computer “could jeopardize civilian and military communications, undermine supervisory and control systems for critical infrastructure, and defeat security protocols for most Internet-based financial transactions,” the memo said.

An exclusive first look inside Amazon’s quantum computer lab

There’s no practical application or algorithm that can be run on a quantum computer that can’t today be accomplished on a normal silicon-based, digital computer.

However, several groups say they’ve proven “quantum supremacy,” indicating that they’ve run a problem on a quantum computer that would’ve taken far longer with a traditional computer. The actions were all abstract.

Google was the first to declare quantum supremacy in 2019, describing its quantum computer’s accomplishment as a “benchmark.” The task it performed is called random circuit sampling, which is basically only used to test quantum computers.

Google says that researchers gave a computer random instructions to make a problem as complex under quantum mechanics as possible. Its researchers were then able to show that a quantum computer is faster at deciphering the quantum problem. Last year, Google said that its new, faster quantum computer Sycamore had expanded the performance gap.

In terms of future real-world applications, most of the potential for quantum computers is in the realms of medicine, chemistry and materials research.

Google points to drug discovery, or finding molecules that could be useful medicines. It also says that quantum computers will be able to do the science needed to commercialize fusion energy.

When Microsoft announced its first quantum chip in February, the company highlighted chemistry and materials science problems, like why some materials corrode, or how to compost plastic.

There is also some optimism that quantum computers will be well suited for generating training data for AI applications, especially for situations or problems with a huge number of potential solutions.

A general view of the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 21, 2025.

Kent Nishimura | Reuters

A Google researcher maintains a webpage that catalogs many of the most prominent quantum algorithms.

The most famous is Shor’s algorithm, which showed that a quantum computer would be able to find prime factors of a large number far faster than is currently possible on a digital computer.

When the algorithm was discovered in 1994, it ignited some concern from militaries around the world. Many of them use an encryption method called RSA, which needs the process of factoring large numbers to be difficult in order to keep data secret.

Worry about China

The fear is that a quantum computer would allow an adversary like China to quickly decode U.S. military messages or consumer banking transactions.

“Without effective mitigation, the impact of adversarial use of a quantum computer could be devastating to [national security systems] and our nation,” the Pentagon said in 2021.

Microsoft has acknowledged the national security factor, and has even framed quantum security as a race against China.

“While most believe that the United States still holds the lead position, we cannot afford to rule out the possibility of a strategic surprise or that China may already be at parity with the United States,” Microsoft President Brad Smith wrote in a blog post in April.

The government has led an effort to move encryption to so-called post-quantum methods, which can’t be broken by a quantum computer. Companies such as Apple have already started to integrate post-quantum encryption into its services like iMessage.

But past communications can still contain secrets. Intelligence agencies and other hackers often collect encrypted data in the expectation that one day it can be decrypted.

For now, much of the work in quantum is still fairly academic.

Most of the advanced hardware companies today are working on “error correction,” or a variety of methods meant to reduce the number of errors, and make them less harmful when they happen.

In present-day quantum computers, the qubits fail as often as 1 out of 1,000 times they are used, according to Microsoft researchers. Microsoft said last week that it was able to reduce the error rate by 1,000-fold thanks to a new approach.

Several improvements in error correction have been announced over the past year, which is one reason why researchers and engineers are increasingly confident that they’ll be able to build a quantum computer.

The next issue to address is scaling up the computers.

Google’s new Willow chip has 105 qubits. Microsoft’s Majorana chip has eight. IBM’s Starling plans to have 200 qubits. Amazon’s Ocelot chip has 14 qubits. In the coming years, these numbers have to go way up. Google and Microsoft say a truly useful quantum computer will need 1 million qubits.

WATCH: Quantum computing is reaching an inflection point

Nvidia CEO: Quantum computing is reaching an inflection point

Continue Reading

Technology

Astronomer CEO Andy Byron resigns after viral Coldplay kiss-cam controversy

Published

on

By

Astronomer CEO Andy Byron resigns after viral Coldplay kiss-cam controversy

Chris Martin of Coldplay performs at the O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire on October 12, 2021 in London, England.

Simone Joyner | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

Astronomer, the technology company that faced backlash after its CEO was allegedly caught in an affair at a Coldplay concert, said the CEO has resigned, the company announced Saturday.

“Andy Byron has tendered his resignation, and the Board of Directors has accepted,” the company said in a statement. “The Board will begin a search for our next Chief Executive as Cofounder and Chief Product Officer Pete DeJoy continues to serve as interim CEO.”

Byron was shown on a big screen at a Coldplay concert on Wednesday with his arms around the company’s chief people officer, Kristin Cabot. Byron, who is married with children, immediately hid when the couple was shown on screen. Lead singer Chris Martin said, “Either they’re having an affair or they’re just very shy.” A concert attendee’s video of the affair went viral.

In May, Astronomer announced a $93 million investment round led by Bain Ventures and other investors, including Salesforce Ventures.

Byron’s resignation comes after Astronomer said Friday that it had launched a “formal investigation” into the matter, and the CEO was placed on administrative leave.

“Before this week, we were known as a pioneer in the DataOps space, helping data teams power everything from modern analytics to production AI,” the company said in its Saturday statement. “Our leaders are expected to set the standard in both conduct and accountability, and recently, that standard was not met.”

Continue Reading

Technology

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang sells an additional $12.94 million worth of shares

Published

on

By

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang sells an additional .94 million worth of shares

Jensen Huang, co-founder and CEO of Nvidia Corp., speaks during a news conference in Taipei on May 21, 2025.

I-hwa Cheng | Afp | Getty Images

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang sold 75,000 shares on Friday, valued at about $12.94 million, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. 

Friday’s sale is part of a plan adopted in March for Huang to sell up to 6 million shares of the leading artificial intelligence company. Earlier this week, Huang sold 225,000 shares of the chipmaker, totaling about $37 million, according to a separate SEC filing. The CEO began trading stock per the plan last month.

Surging demand for AI and the graphics processing units that power large language models has significantly boosted Huang’s net worth and pushed Nvidia’s market capitalization beyond $4 trillion, making it the world’s most valuable company.

Nvidia announced this week that it expects to resume sales of its H20 chips to China soon, following signals from the Trump administration that it would approve export licenses. Earlier this year, U.S. officials had stated that Nvidia would require special permission to ship the chips, which are specifically designed for the Chinese market.

“The U.S. government has assured NVIDIA that licenses will be granted, and NVIDIA hopes to start deliveries soon,” the company said in a statement on Tuesday. Huang said during a news conference on Wednesday in Beijing that he wants to sell chips more advanced than the H20 to China at some point.

Continue Reading

Technology

Peter Thiel-backed cryptocurrency exchange Bullish files to go public on NYSE

Published

on

By

Peter Thiel-backed cryptocurrency exchange Bullish files to go public on NYSE

Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal, Palantir Technologies, and Founders Fund, holds hundred dollar bills as he speaks during the Bitcoin 2022 Conference at Miami Beach Convention Center on April 7, 2022 in Miami, Florida.

Marco Bello | Getty Images

The Peter Thiel-backed cryptocurrency exchange Bullish filed for an IPO on Friday, the latest digital asset firm to head for the public market.

The company, led by CEO Tom Farley, a veteran of the finance industry and former president of the New York Stock Exchange, said it plans to trade on the NYSE under the ticker symbol “BLSH.”

A spinout of Block.one, Bullish started with an initial investment from backers including Thiel’s Founders Fund and Thiel Capital, along with Nomura, Mike Novogratz and others. Bullish acquired crypto news site CoinDesk in 2023.

“In the first quarter of 2025, Bullish exchange executed over $2.5 billion in average daily volume, ranking in the top five exchanges by spot volume for Bitcoin and Ether,” the company said on its website. The prospectus listed top competitors as Binance, Coinbase and Kraken.

The IPO filing says that as of March 31, the total trading volume since launch has exceeded $1.25 trillion.

Read more CNBC tech news

The filing is another significant step for the cryptocurrency industry, which has fought for years to convince institutions to embrace digital assets as legitimate investments.

It’s already been a big year on the market for crypto offerings, highlighted by stablecoin issuer Circle, which has jumped more than sevenfold since its IPO in June. Etoro, an online trading platform that includes services for crypto investors, debuted in May.

Novogratz‘s crypto firm Galaxy Digital started trading on the Nasdaq in May, moving its listing from the Toronto Stock Exchange. And in June, Gemini, the cryptocurrency exchange and custodian founded by Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, confidentially filed for an IPO in the U.S.

Meanwhile, investors continue to flock to bitcoin. The digital currency is trading at over $117,000, up from about $94,000 at the start of the year.

President Donald Trump, on Friday, signed the GENIUS Act into law — a set of regulations that establish some initial consumer protections around stablecoins, which are tied to assets like the U.S. dollar with the intent of reducing price volatility associated with many cryptocurrencies.

In its filing with the SEC, Bullish says its mission is partly to “drive the adoption of stablecoins, digital assets, and blockchain technology.”

Crypto industry players, including Thiel, Elon Musk, and President Trump’s AI and Crypto czar David Sacks spent heavily to re-elect Trump and have pushed for legislation that legitimizes digital assets and exchanges.

WATCH: Trump’s crypto plan

Trump's crypto reserve plan is 'incredibly bullish' for crypto as a whole, asset manager says

Continue Reading

Trending