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Thread: Quantum computers, D-Wave Systems Inc., Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada

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    Quantum computers, D-Wave Systems Inc., Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada

    Last edited by Airicist2; 2nd December 2023 at 23:18.

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    D-Wave Lab Tour Part 1 (of 3) - The Infrastructure of the D-Wave Quantum Computer

    Published on May 6, 2015

    In this video we look at the different systems that make up a D-Wave quantum computer. We show what the cooling system involves, the electromagnetic shielding and how the electronics system programs the quantum processor.

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    D-Wave Lab Tour Part 3 (of 3) - The D-Wave Processor

    Published on May 20, 2015

    In this video we look at the quantum annealing processor. We look at how it differs from regular processors, and how qubits encode 0s and 1s.

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    Quantum Annealing Explained - D-Wave

    Published on Oct 26, 2015

    An explanation of quantum annealing at D-Wave including the applications and the relationship with other forms of quantum
    computing.
    The D-Wave 2X™
    Quantum Computer
    Technology Overview

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    Article "Google takes quantum leap into artificial intelligence"
    The D-Wave 2X quantum computer, developed with NASA, is said to be 100 million times as fast as any of today’s machines. But quantum computers are fraught with challenges.

    by Dominic Basulto
    January 2, 2016

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    Advantage: the first quantum computer built for business | D-Wave

    Sep 29, 2020

    Advantage is the first quantum computer built for business. Advantage is now available through the Leap quantum cloud service. Try it out today by signing up for Leap https://cloud.dwavesys.com/leap/signup

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    Quantum computing, quantum supremacy, and a new Quantum Moore's Law with D-Wave CEO Alan Baratz

    Dec 4, 2020

    What changes when quantum computing is mainstream?

    Quantum computing is on the far reaches of science, using technology that accesses aspects of matter at quantum scales where physics almost overlaps with magic.

    Classical computing is simple: deterministic. You have something, or you have nothing. Quantum computing is complex: you can have something, or nothing, or both something and nothing at the same time. If that’s hard to wrap your head around, you’re in good company. Even Richard Feyman, 1965 Nobel Laureate in Physics and one of the founders of quantum computing famously said, “I think I can safely say that nobody understands quantum mechanics.”

    But we’re seeing major advancements in quantum computing today. You can now write a program and deploy it on quantum computers from anywhere. And D-Wave says that it's doubling qubits every 2 years.

    In this episode of TechFirst with John Koetsier we’re chatting with Alan Baratz, president and CEO of D-Wave.

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