Latest Quantum Computing Post
The week ending November 22, 2025, delivered a powerful surge of advancements in quantum computing demanding your attention—from Hong Kong deploying the city’s first chip-based quantum network to IBM and Cisco unveiling plans for a distributed, fault-tolerant quantum infrastructure. Funding accelerated, hardware reached new milestones, and post-quantum defenses hardened. These developments aren’t hype; they’re the building blocks of the next computing era. Here’s the full summary you can’t afford to miss.
Our Mission
At The Qubit Report, our mission is to promote knowledge and opinion of quantum computing from the casual reader to the scientifically astute. Because Quantum is Coming.
Recent Quantum Computing Posts
How to Cope With the Side Effects of Quantum Error Correction
It is well established that quantum error correction can improve the performance of quantum sensors. But new theory work cautions that, unexpectedly, the approach can also give rise to inaccurate and misleading results — and shows how to rectify these shortcomings.
Research Suggests Viable Use of Silicon Technology as Alternative to Superconducting or Trapped Ion Quantum Computers
Research conducted by Princeton University physicists is paving the way for the use of silicon-based technologies in quantum computing, especially as quantum bits – the basic units of quantum computers.
Fixing Cryptography Before It Is Broken
Ever since Peter Shor showed how a quantum computer could factorize large numbers with exponential speedup, it has been known that quantum computers could become a threat to most cryptographic algorithms currently in use.
Their Goal: To Make Quantum Computing Networks Reliable and Practical
The researchers goal is to improve the scientific community’s knowledge on the types of physical systems needed to make quantum computing networks reliable and practical.
Transforming Quantum Computing Hype Into Reality
In the life sciences, quantum computing has the promise of transforming R&D processes and advancing drug discovery. Yet, despite recent headlines, widespread understanding of quantum computing in the life sciences is limited.
Quantum New Mexico Coalition Aims to Establish State as National Hub
Sandia National Laboratories, The University of New Mexico and Los Alamos National Laboratory announced the new coalition April 1st at UNM during the Quantum New Mexico Symposium.
Stanford Researchers Propose Cost-Effective, Optical Quantum Computer Design
There is immediate potential for the researchers’ quantum computer design to be used for optimization algorithms, search algorithms and new methods for discovering chemical compounds in the pharmaceutical industry.
Not Hype But More About Hype: Sankar Das Sarma is ‘Disturbed by Some of the Quantum Computing Hype I See These Days’
Prominent University of Maryland quantum researcher Sankar Das Sarma says that everybody needs to take a deep, deep breath.
Keeping It Real: Quantum Computing Has a Hype Problem
A decade and more ago, I [Sankar Das Sarma, author] was often asked when I thought a real quantum computer would be built…(It is interesting that I no longer face this question as quantum-computing hype has apparently convinced people that these systems already exist or are just around the corner).