IBM is no longer talking about quantum computing as a distant science project. It is laying out a tightly sequenced plan that stretches from today’s noisy chips to fault-tolerant machines that could ...
There are lots of quantum computing start-ups, but IBM, America's first tech company, has led the pack since the 1970s, and is set to continue that dominance through 2026 and beyond.
IBM on Monday unveiled four new POWER7 server models which it said could lead to a consolidation of smaller servers into fewer larger ones while cutting data center energy costs. The Unix server ...
New IBM Telum II Processor and IBM Spyre Accelerator unlock capabilities for enterprise-scale AI, including large language models and generative AI Advanced I/O technology enables and simplifies a ...
IBM says quantum computing will be built on top of existing architecture, such as classical GPUs.
IBM on Tuesday announced a detailed roadmap to develop a large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer called Quantum Starling. Part of the company's plan involves the new IBM Quantum Nighthawk ...
IBM hopes to do for its Power processor what it helped do for Linux: create a bigger market in which lots of vendors can play, and earn more money for IBM in the process. IBM hopes to do for its Power ...
At the annual IBM Quantum Summit, IBM highlighted the achievement of breaking the 100-qubit barrier with the new 127-qubit Eagle processor. Through the new technology, IBM reached a significant ...
Big Blue plans to introduce a 64-processor server, the high-end pinnacle of efforts to reclaim its server crown from competitor Sun Microsystems. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and ...
The ‘Eagle’ processor is a breakthrough in tapping into the massive computing potential of devices based on quantum physics. It heralds the point in hardware development where quantum circuits cannot ...
The Power architecture doesn’t get the attention it deserves. With Power5 servers finally shipping, even non-Big Blue shops should take look again If all things were equal and IBM made its systems as ...