Working with IBM Quantum, BITS scientists simulated the behaviour of subatomic particles on 120 qubits of an IBM processor; in a first for Indian labs, the Quantum Advantage Tracker has deemed the ...
The company has drawn governments, a major chipmaker, and the Pentagon into an effort to control fragile photons and build a ...
Privacy professionals should pay closer attention to post-quantum cryptography as quantum-enabled attacks could eventually ...
Long context AI no longer means using data centres thanks to Tether acting swiftly on groundbreaking research from Google.
China AI companion law took effect July 15, 2026, forcing ByteDance’s Doubao and Alibaba’s Qwen to shut down personalized AI ...
RNA has emerged as one of the most promising molecules in modern medicine, enabling advances from mRNA vaccines and gene ...
A new macOS information-stealing malware called CrashStealer pretends to be Apple's crash-reporting tool to steal credentials ...
The first-ever all-electric Ferrari was revealed a month ago, and it's been the subject of an endless stream of hate and ...
The bad news: "Moana" is a waste of time. But the lesser-known "Redux Redux" and "Wardriver" are worth a watch this weekend.
An Indian research team developed a quantum algorithm that outperformed classical computers, solving a complex physics problem on IBM's 120-qubit processor in just 20 seconds.
Quantum computing has imprinted itself on our society as a weird, wacky way of computing that most of us can’t comprehend.