Google just revealed a quantum computing first.
Its quantum computer learned to fix its own mistakes… while it was running.
It’s the latest sign that quantum computing is taking major leaps forward.
Go here for my #1 quantum Pre-IPO.
Quantum computers are incredibly powerful but they have a weakness…
They drift out of tune, like a piano played around the clock.
Until now, engineers had to stop the machine and recalibrate it by hand.
Google’s team gave its quantum computer an AI system that learns from the machine’s own errors… and retunes more than 1,000 settings automatically, without ever stopping the computation.
The errors dropped by roughly 20%.
And the machine became 3.5 times more stable.
So basically Google just taught a quantum computer to take care of itself.
That’s one of the biggest obstacles to useful quantum computing… and it’s falling years ahead of schedule.
It’s the same pattern we’ve seen all year.
Nvidia’s CEO said quantum reached an inflection point. IBM used a quantum computer for a world-first fusion breakthrough. The White House set a national quantum deadline.
Every milestone brings the quantum era closer.
And the biggest winners won’t be giants like Google.
They’ll be the small, early-stage quantum companies riding the same wave… bought before the crowd catches on.
That’s why I’m a founding investor in this private quantum company.
Its technology could be critical to protecting banks, digital assets, and our nation’s infrastructure from quantum computing threats.
It’s preparing to open a final Pre-IPO financing before it lists on the Nasdaq or the NYSE.
Shares are less than $5.
And my research suggests they could jump as much as 300% after IPO day.
Ian Wyatt