A deep dive into the race to develop a quantum computer, which could help address climate change and food scarcity, break current encryption protocols, and more (Stephen Witt/New Yorker)

Stephen Witt / New Yorker:
A deep dive into the race to develop a quantum computer, which could help address climate change and food scarcity, break current encryption protocols, and more  —  Such a device could help address climate change and food scarcity, or break the Internet.  Will the U.S. or China get there first?

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Colorado-based ColdQuanta, which uses cold atom tech to build and integrate quantum computers, sensors, clocks, and networks, raised a $110M Series B (Daniel Levi/Tech Startups)

Daniel Levi / Tech Startups:
Colorado-based ColdQuanta, which uses cold atom tech to build and integrate quantum computers, sensors, clocks, and networks, raised a $110M Series B  —  The internet has changed over the years.  But the groundwork for today’s internet was laid in 1973 by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).

IBM announces its Osprey quantum processor with 433 qubits, up from 127 qubits in the 2021 Eagle processor, and plans to hit 4,000 qubits by 2025 (Frederic Lardinois/TechCrunch)

Frederic Lardinois / TechCrunch:
IBM announces its Osprey quantum processor with 433 qubits, up from 127 qubits in the 2021 Eagle processor, and plans to hit 4,000 qubits by 2025  —  IBM wants to scale up its quantum computers to over 4,000 qubits by 2025 — but we’re not quite there yet.  For now, we have to make do with …

A wide-ranging interview with Cory Doctorow on lessons from science fiction, Big Tech’s comeuppance, surveillance capitalism, smart contracts, dApps, and more (Christopher Byrd/New Yorker)

Christopher Byrd / New Yorker:
A wide-ranging interview with Cory Doctorow on lessons from science fiction, Big Tech’s comeuppance, surveillance capitalism, smart contracts, dApps, and more  —  A conversation about the “mediocre monopolists” of Big Tech, the weirdness of crypto, and the real lessons of science fiction.

Google starts testing client-side encryption for Gmail with some Workspace users, and plans to add it to its Android and iOS apps (Mitchell Clark/The Verge)

Mitchell Clark / The Verge:
Google starts testing client-side encryption for Gmail with some Workspace users, and plans to add it to its Android and iOS apps  —  Google has launched a beta of its client-side encryption for Gmail, letting businesses apply to test out the feature meant to make “sensitive data” and attachments unreadable even to Google.

Google starts testing client-side encryption for Gmail with some Workspace users, and plans to add it to its Android and iOS apps (Mitchell Clark/The Verge)

Mitchell Clark / The Verge:
Google starts testing client-side encryption for Gmail with some Workspace users, and plans to add it to its Android and iOS apps  —  Google has launched a beta of its client-side encryption for Gmail, letting businesses apply to test out the feature meant to make “sensitive data” and attachments unreadable even to Google.