Taxpayers are backing Sydney start-up Diraq’s ambition to become a global leader in utility-scale quantum computing.
AAP Newsroom on MSN
Australia's quantum leap: $20m boost for homegrown firm
Quantum technology that promises to outsmart artificial intelligence could be made in Australia after an investment in a ...
Simmons says that silicon quantum processors offer an inherent advantage in scaling, too. Generating numerous registers on a ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Quantum batteries could quadruple qubit capacity in future quantum computers
Researchers have proposed a theoretical approach to powering quantum computers using quantum batteries. It ...
Australia’s taxpayer-backed National Reconstruction Fund (NRFC) has poured $20m into a Sydney-based quantum start-up, Diraq, making a financial commitment that it says is “high risk.” ...
Australian and Japanese researchers will collaborate on quantum-classical computing using some of the world’s fastest systems ...
Diamonds might be the next big thing in quantum computing. Quantum Brilliance now grows ultra-pure diamonds for better ...
Senior figures from Australia’s technology industry have received awards or appointments during 2026 Australia Day ceremonies ...
OzTech: Quantum hub comes to Tech Central; NSW extends digital photo card trial; IT popular in JobTrainer courses; Aussie spending on IoT and cloud services rises; NSW’s $6 million R&D fund OzTech ...
5don MSN
Quantum batteries could quadruple qubit capacity while reducing energy infrastructure requirements
Scientists have unveiled a new approach to powering quantum computers using quantum batteries—a breakthrough that could make future computers faster, more reliable, and more energy efficient.
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