It's called NanoFab Reflection. It's expected to cost $614 million to build and is part of a $10 billion computer chip ...
Quantum computing in 2026 still isn't a faster laptop. It doesn't make email snappier, and it won't speed up spreadsheets.
Physicist Paul Davies looks back at the past century of quantum mechanics—the most disruptive theory in the history of modern science.
For almost two decades, scientists have been trying to move beyond silicon, the material ...