PsiQuantum’s Path to 1 Million Qubits by the Middle of the Decade – HPCwire
PsiQuantum, founded in 2016 by four researchers with roots at Bristol University, Stanford University, and York University, is one of a few quantum computing startups thats kept a moderately low PR profile. (Thats if you disregard the roughly $700 million in funding it has attracted.) The main reason is PsiQuantum has eschewed the clamorous public chase for NISQ (near-term intermediate scale quantum) computers and set out to develop a million-qubit system the company says will deliver big gains on big problems as soon as it arrives.
When will that be?
PsiQuantum says it will have all the manufacturing processes in place by the middle of the decade and its working closely with GlobalFoundries (GF) to turn its vision into reality. The generous size of its funding suggests many think it will succeed. PsiQuantum is betting on a photonics-based approach called fusion-based quantum computing (paper) that relies mostly on well-understood optical technology but requires extremely precise manufacturing tolerances to scale up. It also relies on managing individual photons, something that has proven difficult for others.
Heres the companys basic contention:
Success in quantum computing will require large, fault-tolerant systems and the current preoccupation with NISQ computers is an interesting but ultimately mistaken path. The most effective and fastest route to practical quantum computing will require leveraging (and innovating) existing semiconductor manufacturing processes and networking thousands of quantum chips together to reach the million-qubit system threshold thats widely regarded as necessary to run game-changing applications in chemistry, banking, and other sectors.
Its not that incrementalism is bad. In fact, its necessary. But its not well served when focused on delivering NISQ systems argues Peter Shadbolt, one of PsiQuantum founders and the current chief scientific officer.
Conventional supercomputers are already really good. Youve got to do some kind of step change, you cant increment your way [forward], and especially you cant increment with five qubits, 10 qubits, 20 qubits, 50 qubits to a million. That is not a good strategy. But its also not true to say that were planning to leap from zero to a million, said Shadbolt. We have a whole chain of incrementally larger and larger systems that were building along the way. Those allow us to validate the control electronics, the systems integration, the cryogenics, the networking, etc. But were not spending time and energy, trying to dress those up as something that theyre not. Were not having to take those things and try to desperately extract computational value from something that doesnt have any computational value. Were able to use those intermediate systems for our own learnings and for our own development.
Thats a much different approach from the majority of quantum computing hopefuls. Shadbolt suggests the broad message about the need to push beyond NISQ dogma is starting to take hold.
There is a change that is happening now, which is that people are starting to program for error-corrected quantum computers, as opposed to programming for NISQ computers. Thats a welcome change and thats happening across the whole space. If youre programming for NISQ computers, you very rapidly get deeply entangled if youll forgive the pun with the hardware. You start looking under the hood, and you start trying to find shortcuts to deal with the fact that you have so few gates at your disposal. So, programming NISQ computers is a fascinating, intellectually stimulating activity, Ive done it myself, but it rapidly becomes sort of siloed and you have to pick a winner, said Shadbolt.
With fault tolerance, once you start to accept that youre going to need error correction, then you can start programming in a fault-tolerant gate set which is hardware agnostic, and its much more straightforward to deal with. There are also some surprising characteristics, which mean that the optimizations that you make to algorithms in a fault-tolerant regime are in many cases, the diametric opposite of the optimizations that you would make in the NISQ regime. It really takes a different approach but its very welcome that the whole industry is moving in that direction and spending less time on these kinds of myopic, narrow efforts, he said.
That sounds a bit harsh. PsiQuantum is no doubt benefitting from the manifold efforts by the young quantum computing ecosystem to tout advances and build traction by promoting NISQ use cases. Theres an old business axiom that says a little hype is often a necessary lubricant to accelerate development of young industries; quantum computing certainly has its share. A bigger question is will PsiQuantum beat rivals to the end-game? IBM has laid out a detailed roadmap and said 2023 is when it will start delivering quantum advantage, using a 1000-qubit system, with plans for eventual million-qubit systems. Intel has trumpeted its CMOS strength to scale up manufacturing its quantum dot qubits. D-Wave has been selling its quantum annealing systems to commercial and government customers for years.
Its really not yet clear which of the qubit technologies semiconductor-based superconducting, trapped ions, neutral atoms, photonics, or something else will prevail and for which applications. Whats not ambiguous is PsiQuantums Go Big or Go Home strategy. Its photonics approach, argues the company, has distinct advantages in manufacturability and scalability, operating environment (less frigid), ease of networking, and error correction. Shadbolt recently talked with HPCwire about the companys approach, technology and progress.
What is fusion-based quantum computing?
Broadly, PsiQuantum uses a form of linear optical quantum computing in which individual photons are used as qubits. Over the past year and a half, the previously stealthy PsiQuantum has issued several papers describing the approach while keeping many details close to the vest (papers listed at end of article). The computation flow is to generate single photons and entangle them. PsiQuantum uses dual rail entangling/encoding for photons. The entangled photons are the qubits and are grouped into what PsiQuantum calls resource states, a group of qubits if you will. Fusion measurements (more below) act as gates. Shadbolt says the operations can be mapped to a standard gate-set to achieve universal, error-corrected, quantum computing.
On-chip components carry out the process. It all sounds quite exotic, in part because it differs from more-widely used matter-based qubit technologies. The figure below taken from a PsiQuantum paper Fusion-based quantum computation issued about a year ago roughly describes the process.
Digging into the details is best served by reading the papers and the company has archived videos exploring its approach on its website. The video below is a good brief summation by Mercedes Gimeno-Segovia, vice president of quantum architecture at PsiQuantum.
Shadbolt also briefly described fusion-based quantum computation (FBQC).
Once youve got single photons, you need to build what we refer to as seed states. Those are pretty small entangled states and can be constructed again using linear optics. So, you take some single photons and send them into an interferometer and together with single photon detection, you can probabilistically generate small entangled states. You can then multiplex those again and basically the task is to get as fast as possible to a large enough, complex enough, appropriately structured, resource state which is ready to then be acted upon by a fusion network. Thats it. You want to kill the photon as fast as possible. You dont want photons living for a long time if you can avoid it. Thats pretty much it, said Shadbolt.
The fusion operators are the smallest simplest piece of the machine. The multiplex, single-photon sources are the biggest, most expensive piece. Everything in the middle is kind of the secret sauce of our architecture, some of that weve put out in that paper and you can see kind of how that works, he said. (At the risk of overkill, another brief description of the system from PsiQuantum is presented at the end of the article.)
One important FBQC advantage, says PsiQuantum, is that the shallow depth of optical circuits make error correction easier. The small entangled states fueling the computation are referred to as resource states. Importantly, their size is independent of code distance used or the computation being performed. This allows them to be generated by a constant number of operations. Since the resource states will be immediately measured after they are created, the total depth of operations is also constant. As a result, errors in the resource states are bounded, which is important for fault-tolerance.
Some of the differences between the PsiQuantums FBQC design and the more familiar MBQC (measurement-based quantum computing) paradigm are shown below.
Another advantage is the operating environment.
Nothing about photons themselves requires cryogenic operation. You can do very high fidelity manipulation and generation of qubits at room temperature, and in fact, you can even detect single photons at room temperature just fine. The efficiency of room temperature single photon detectors, is not good enough for fault tolerance. These room temperature detectors are based on pretty complex semiconductor devices, avalanche photodiodes, and theres no physical reason why you couldnt push those to the necessary efficiency, but it looks really difficult [and] people have been trying for a very long time, said Shadbolt
We use a superconducting single-photon detector, which can achieve the necessary efficiencies without a ton of development. Its worth noting those detectors run in the ballpark of 4 Kelvin. So liquid helium temperature, which is still very cold, but its nowhere near as cold as milli-Kelvin temperatures required for superconducting qubits or some of the competing technologies, said Shadbolt.
This has important implications for control circuit placement as well as for reduced power needed to generate the 4-degree Kelvin environment.
Theres a lot to absorb here and its best done directly from the papers. PsiQuantum, like many other quantum start-ups, was founded by researchers who were already digging into the quantum computing space and theyve shown that PsiQuantums FBQC flavor of linear optical quantum computing will work. While at Bristol, Shadbolt was involved in the first demonstration of running a Variational Quantum Eigensolver (VQE) on a photonic chip.
The biggest challenges for PsiQuantum, he suggests, are developing manufacturing techniques and system architecture around well-known optical technology. The company argues having a Tier-1 fab partner such as GlobalFoundries is decisive.
You can go into infinite detail on the architecture and how all the bits and pieces go together. But the point of optical quantum computing is that the network of components is pretty complicated all sorts of modules and structures and multiplexing strategies, and resource state generation schemes and interferometers, and so on but theyre all just made out of beam splitters, and switches, and single photon sources and detectors. Its kind of like in a conventional CPU, you can go in with a microscope and examine the structure of the cache and the ALU and whatever, but underneath its all just transistors. Its the same kind of story here. The limiting factor in our development is the semiconductor process enablement. The thesis has always been that if you tried to build a quantum computer anywhere other than a high-volume semiconductor manufacturing line, your quantum computer isnt going to work, he said.
Any quantum computer needs millions of qubits. Millions of qubits dont fit on a single chip. So youre talking about heaps of chips, probably billions of components realistically, and they all need to work and they all need to work better than the state of the art. That brings us to the progress, which is, again, rearranging those various components into ever more efficient and complex networks in pretty close analogy with CPU architecture. Its a very key part of our IP, but its not rate limiting and its not terribly expensive to change the network of components on the chip once weve got the manufacturing process. Were continuously moving the needle on that architecture development and weve improved these architectures in terms of their tolerance to loss by more than 150x, [actually] well beyond that. Weve reduced the size of the machine, purely through architectural improvements by many, many orders of magnitude.
The big, expensive, slow pieces of the development are in being able to build high quality components at GlobalFoundries in New York. What weve already done there is to put single photon sources and superconducting nanowire, single photon detectors into that manufacturing process engine. We can build wafers, 300-millimeter wafers, with tens of thousands of components on the wafer, including a full silicon photonics PDK (process design kit), and also a very high performing single photon detector. Thats real progress that brings us closer to being able to build a quantum computer, because that lets us build millions to billions of components.
Shadbolt says real systems will quickly follow development of the manufacturing process. PsiQuantum, like everyone in the quantum computing community, is collaborating closely with potential users. Roughly a week ago, it issued a joint paper with Mercedes-Benz discussing quantum computer simulation of Li-ion chemistry. If the PsiQuantum-GlobalFoundries process is ready around 2025, can a million-qubit system (100 logical qubits) be far behind?
Shadbolt would only say that things will happen quickly once the process has been fully developed. He noted there are three ways to make money with a quantum computer: sell machines, sell time, and sell solutions that come from that machine. I think we were exploring all of the above, he said.
Our customers, which is a growing list at this point pharmaceutical companies, car companies, materials companies, big banks are coming to us to understand what a quantum computer can do for them. To understand that, what we are doing, principally, is fault-tolerant resource counting, said Shadbolt. So that means were taking the algorithm or taking the problem the customer has, working with their technical teams to look under the hood, and understand the technical requirements of solving that problem. We are turning that into the quantum algorithms and sub routines that are appropriate. Were compiling that for the fault-tolerant gate set that will run on top of that fusion network, which by the way is a completely vanilla textbook fault-tolerant gate set.
Stay tuned.
PsiQuantum Papers
Fusion-based quantum computation, https://arxiv.org/abs/2101.09310
Creation of Entangled Photonic States Using Linear Optics, https://arxiv.org/abs/2106.13825
Interleaving: Modular architectures for fault-tolerant photonic quantum computing, https://arxiv.org/abs/2103.08612
Description of PsiQuantums Fusion-Based System from the Interleaving Paper
Useful fault-tolerant quantum computers require very large numbers of physical qubits. Quantum computers are often designed as arrays of static qubits executing gates and measurements. Photonic qubits require a different approach. In photonic fusion-based quantum computing (FBQC), the main hardware components are resource-state generators (RSGs) and fusion devices connected via waveguides and switches. RSGs produce small entangled states of a few photonic qubits, whereas fusion devices perform entangling measurements between different resource states, thereby executing computations. In addition, low-loss photonic delays such as optical fiber can be used as fixed-time quantum memories simultaneously storing thousands of photonic qubits.
Here, we present a modular architecture for FBQC in which these components are combined to form interleaving modules consisting of one RSG with its associated fusion devices and a few fiber delays. Exploiting the multiplicative power of delays, each module can add thousands of physical qubits to the computational Hilbert space. Networks of modules are universal fault-tolerant quantum computers, which we demonstrate using surface codes and lattice surgery as a guiding example. Our numerical analysis shows that in a network of modules containing 1-km-long fiber delays, each RSG can generate four logical distance-35 surface-code qubits while tolerating photon loss rates above 2% in addition to the fiber-delay loss. We illustrate how the combination of interleaving with further uses of non-local fiber connections can reduce the cost of logical operations and facilitate the implementation of unconventional geometries such as periodic boundaries or stellated surface codes. Interleaving applies beyond purely optical architectures, and can also turn many small disconnected matter-qubit devices with transduction to photons into a large-scale quantum computer.
Slides/Figures from various PsiQuantum papers and public presentations
Continued here:
PsiQuantum's Path to 1 Million Qubits by the Middle of the Decade - HPCwire
- How a quantum computer can be used to actually steal your bitcoin in '9 minutes' - CoinDesk - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Quantum stocks on pace for a massive week after Nvidia debuts AI models to boost the tech - CNBC - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- 3 Best Quantum Computing Stocks to Buy in April 2026, According to Analysts - TipRanks - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Why Quantum Computing Stock Was Blasting Higher This Week - Yahoo Finance - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Quantum-informed AI improves long-term turbulence forecasts while using far less memory - Phys.org - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Quantum Frontiers: Stony Brook Researchers Chart the Future of Technology - SBU News - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Quantum Jamming Explores the Truly Fundamental Principles of Nature - Quanta Magazine - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- University of Illinois Renews Quantum Tech Partnership With IBM - govtech.com - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Oxford scientists achieve quantum gate teleportation between two quantum supercomputers - The Brighter Side of News - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Ferguson invests in Snohomish County to make it the Quantum Valley of the West - Lynnwood Times - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Alice & Bob Surpasses Hiring Targets Ahead of Schedule as Quantum Workforce Grows - HPCwire - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- How IonQ Became the Most Exciting Name in Quantum Computing This Week - inc.com - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- How a quantum computer can be used to actually steal your bitcoin in '9 minutes' - Cryptonews.net - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- India built a fully indigenous quantum computer in just four months. But what exactly can it do, and does it actually stand up against what the US,... - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Bitcoin miners are dealing with this triple-threat. Im a seven worried, says mining CEO - dlnews.com - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- The Korea Quantum Trade: Why Seoul Produced the Biggest Stock Moves on NVIDIA's Ising Launch - The Quantum Insider - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- 3 Screaming Buys for the Upcoming AI-Quantum Supercycle - The Motley Fool - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Satoshi Nakamoto is one of the richest people in the world, but a proposed update could lock his Bitcoin away forever - dlnews.com - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- A $2M quantum prize went to cancer-treatment research on IBM - Stock Titan - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Recent advances push Big Tech closer to the Q-Day danger zone - Ars Technica - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- NVIDIA Launches Ising, the Worlds First Open AI Models to Accelerate the Path to Useful Quantum Computers - NVIDIA Newsroom - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Quantum computing stocks are back on the rise. Heres why IONQ, QBTS, RGTI, and QUBT are up - Fast Company - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- How IBM Quantum is enabling healthcare and biology research - IBM - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Key quantum computing stock jumps 20% in a day, heres why - thestreet.com - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- QuEras Yuval Boger on Quantum Timelines, Neutral-Atom Systems, and the Hybrid Future - MeriTalk - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Why Quantum Computing Stock Was Blasting Higher This Week - The Motley Fool - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Quantum Computing Advanced Packaging Market to 2035 Driven by Scaling Qubit Counts in Processors - IndexBox - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Quantum Fourier transform reaches 52 qubits, shattering the previous 27-qubit record - Phys.org - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Israel Is Winning the Quantum Race. It May Not Finish It - The Times of Israel - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- University of Illinois and IBM renew quantum technology partnership at new Chicago headquarters - Chicago Tribune - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Quantum Computing's Crypto Threat Is Getting Realand Investors Are Piling In - MarketBeat - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Pulsar Helium: "Blue Gold" And Its Role In Quantum Computing (OTCMKTS:PSRHF) - Seeking Alpha - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Analysts Are Bullish on These 3 Quantum Computing Stocks Including One Youve Never Heard Of - Yahoo Finance - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Quantum photonics roadmap how Xanadu and PsiQuantum are looking to transfer qubits through beams of light - Tom's Hardware - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Quantum Computing Stocks Are Surging. New Models From Nvidia Are Helping Drive the Rally. - Investopedia - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- IBM and University of Illinois Extend Discovery Accelerator Institute to Link Quantum and HPC Systems - HPCwire - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- 15 months after crippling quantum computing stocks, Nvidia has sent the industry back into the stratosphere - Sherwood News - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- VPNs Will Be Useless On A Quantum Internet Your Location Can Always Be Known - IFLScience - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- UMD ARLIS Breaks Ground on $65M Facility to Support Applied Quantum and Intelligence Missions - HPCwire - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Moth Bets Quantum Computing Will Reach Consumers by Next World Quantum Day - The Quantum Insider - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- BTQ Technologies Advances Quantum Reliability at Scale with First General Theory of Error Correction for Permutation-Invariant Codes - PR Newswire - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Famed investor Andrew Left says Nvidia has already crowned the big quantum stock winner - AOL.com - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Should You Buy Sell or Hold IonQ at $42 Is the Quantum Rally Back? - 24/7 Wall St. - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Quantum Clock Is Ticking: Colton Dillion on Building the Worldwide Quantum Computer Before Crypto Breaks - CCN.com - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- IonQ, Nvidia Make Strides on World Quantum Day. Whats Lifting the Stocks. - Barron's - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Prediction: This Will Be Rigetti Computing's Stock Price in 1 Year - The Motley Fool - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- D-Wave CEO Brings Commercial Quantum Computing to the Center of Global Economic and Technology Discussions at Semafor World Economy and QED-C Quantum... - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Quantum Computing vs Classical Computing Whats the Real Difference - The Quantum Insider - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- How Columbus is leading the way on World Quantum Day - The Columbus Dispatch - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- What Quantum Technology is and Why it Matters - The Quantum Insider - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Global Quantum Computing Market to Double by 2028, Reaching $3 Billion in Revenue, QED-C State of the Global Quantum Industry 2026 Report Finds - The... - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- IQM Introduces AI-Based Calibration for Scalable Quantum Systems - The Quantum Insider - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- France bets 500 million that quantum computing is the tech race Europe can finally win - The Next Web - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Bull and Equal1 Partner to Accelerate Hybrid Quantum-HPC Integration in Europe - HPCwire - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Nvidia slaps forehead: AI, thats what quantum needs! - theregister.com - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Today is World Quantum Day. Heres why it matters more than you think - Fast Company - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Bull and Equal1 Partner on Hybrid Quantum and HPC Integration - The Quantum Insider - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Intersection of humanities and quantum physics discussed during URIs World Quantum Day - The University of Rhode Island - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Rigetti Computing vs. IonQ: Diverging Trends in Quarterly Revenue - The Motley Fool - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Curious about quantum? Check out training options from ISC2, IBM, AWS and more - Network World - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Quantum computing is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for Canada. Here's how we can grow the industry at home - Financial Post - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Quantum-HPC convergence moves from theory to mission - SiliconANGLE - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Quantum Computing (NASDAQ:QUBT) Trading Up 11% - Here's Why - MarketBeat - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Quantum-Day Reality Check: Debunking the Quantum Threat to Crypto - CCN.com - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Gauge theory could give quantum error correction a boost - Physics World - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- Guest Post: The Global Quantum Race is Here And Politicians Must Keep Up - The Quantum Insider - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- IonQ, Rigetti, D-Wave and Nvidia Rise on World Quantum Day. What's Lifting the Stocks. - Moomoo - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- IonQ Soars 18%, D-Wave Climbs 15%, Rigetti Gains 12%: Is the Quantum Super-Cycle Back in Full Force? - 24/7 Wall St. - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- IQM Advances AI-Driven Agentic Calibration, Opening Quantum Computing to the Enterprise With NVIDIA Ising - PA Media - April 14th, 2026 [April 14th, 2026]
- The Best Quantum Computing Stocks to Buy Today - The Motley Fool - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Quantum Computing Is Beginning to Take Shape Here Are Three Recent Breakthroughs - Discover Magazine - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- How Sensitive Are The Computers Of The Future? - Eurasia Review - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- The Quantum Computing ETF That Could Be Bigger Than AI, and 2 Tech Funds Riding the Same Wave - 24/7 Wall St. - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Quantum Computing Threat to Bitcoin: Google Warns of Accelerated Timeline - News and Statistics - IndexBox - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Is Rigetti Computing's New 2-Qubit Gate Fidelity Record a Reason to Buy the Stock? - Yahoo Finance - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Quantum XChanges Eddy Zervigon on Q-Day, PQC Readiness, and How Federal CIOs Can Start the Migration Now - MeriTalk - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Guest Post: The UK's Quantum Ambitions Will Fail Without The Components to Make Them Real - The Quantum Insider - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- The Quantum Computing ETF That Could Be Bigger Than AI, and 2 Tech Funds Riding the Same Wave - AOL.com - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Quantum threat looms far beyond Bitcoin, says Grayscale - thestreet.com - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- How Should We Prepare for the Looming Quantum Encryption Apocalypse? - Gizmodo - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]