Taiwan connects its first home-grown quantum computer to the internet
A January 19 announcement of the connection reveals that the machine has five qubits and is available as a test bed for the university’s project collaborators, with other researchers able to use it as a development platform for their own efforts using the machine’s ultra-low temperature CMOS and parametric amplifiers. Collaborators include the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, so this machine’s success may assist US quantum development efforts.
24th January 2024
A January 19 announcement of the connection reveals that the machine has five qubits and is available as a test bed for the university’s project collaborators, with other researchers able to use it as a development platform for their own efforts using the machine’s ultra-low temperature CMOS and parametric amplifiers. Collaborators include the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, so this machine’s success may assist US quantum development efforts.
24th January 2024