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MarketLine Department
EUR 430.76 For Business Accounts Only

Quantum Computing - Creating computers with extraordinary capabilities to solve humanity's biggest problems

Quantum Computing - Creating computers with extraordinary capabilities to solve humanity's biggest problems

Summary

Quantum computers are the key to the lock that prevents many of our most important technological developments being truly useful to us. For instance, with a huge data set that holds the mapping of the human genome or all the global weather patterns describing climate change, we need multiple elements to come together to make use of this information, an AI brain to ask the right questions and interpret the things we don’t have the capacity to understand and a quantum computer to perform the staggering amount of calculations needed to produce an answer. Quantum computers have the capacity to outperform traditional computers by several orders of magnitude and potentially much more as they develop. Many of the key problems that have prevented a working example being produced have now been solved and Intel, Google, Microsoft and NASA are just some of the huge organizations that are driving this technology.

Key Questions Answered

- What is Quantum computing and how could it be useful?
- What is the difference between quantum and conventional computing?
- Who is investing heavily in this technology and why?

Scope

- Complete break down of what quantum computing is and the major breakthroughs that have just been made in the field.
- See how the future might change once companies and governments have Quantum computing power.
- Learn who is ahead in the race to build functioning quantum computers and what players are buying them.

Reasons to buy

- Computational ability has been improving rapidly and today's chips and supercomputers have progressed rapidly since the world’s first chip from Intel was introduced in 1971. Following the pattern of Moore’s Law, which describes how the ability of chips snowballs overtime as the number of transistors increases, todays chips are dramatically better than previous generations.
- Quantum computing is based on the remarkable world of sub atomic particles. Essentially particles that make up an atom act in extraordinary ways and we can use these physical properties to build computers with similarly extraordinary capabilities. The atomic world of the quantum has rules that cannot be seen anywhere else and the weirdness of this world means harnessing its effects poses very unusual challenges too.
- Investments, development and research groups have been established in companies from many different industries. They all see the potential value of having quantum computers in house to help aid their particular industry and their specific market focus.
Provider
MarketLine
MarketLine

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