IBM Says New Quantum Computing Tech , Will 'Explore New Frontiers of Science'.<br />On December 4, IBM unveiled a new quantum computing <br />chip and machine the company says could be the <br />foundation for much larger and faster systems. .<br />'The Guardian' reports that IBM's Quantum System Two, which <br />utilizes three "Heron" cryogenically cooled chips, comes amid fierce <br />competition to reach a breakthrough in quantum computing.<br />Microsoft, Google, Baidu and others are all racing to <br />develop machines that rely on quantum bits, which can be <br />both one and zero at the same, unlike traditional computing.<br />Microsoft, Google, Baidu and others are all racing to <br />develop machines that rely on quantum bits, which can be <br />both one and zero at the same, unlike traditional computing.<br />Microsoft, Google, Baidu and others are all racing to <br />develop machines that rely on quantum bits, which can be <br />both one and zero at the same, unlike traditional computing.<br />According to IBM, the company has developed a new <br />way of connecting chips within quantum machines, <br />and then connecting multiple machines together.<br />The technology could be used to <br />produce fully-functioning quantum <br />computing machines by 2033. .<br />IBM said that it plans to use the new <br />quantum technology in its artificial <br />intelligence platform, watsonx.<br />We are firmly within the era <br />in which quantum computers <br />are being used as a tool to <br />explore new frontiers of science, Dario Gil, IBM’s director of research, via 'The Guardian'.<br />IBM's director of research, Dario Gil, told CBS '60 Minutes' that <br />quantum computing could be used to solve problems that <br />would take current computers millions of years to complete.<br />The beauty of it, is that not even <br />a million or a billion of those <br />supercomputers connected together <br />could do the calculations <br />of these future machines, Dario Gil, IBM’s director of research, via 'The Guardian'.<br />'The Guardian' reports that IBM also said that <br />one of its advanced new machines has already <br />been installed at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio.