IBM has just revealed plans to launch Starling - the world's first modular quantum computer with 200 logical qubits and built-in error correction by 2029. This revolutionary machine, to be housed at IBM's new Poughkeepsie data center, promises to be 20,000 times more powerful than today's quantum systems.
Why This Changes Everything
Problem-Solving Power: Could crack complex calculations in minutes that take today's supercomputers years
Error Correction: Solves quantum computing's biggest hurdle - maintaining stable qubits
Real-World Applications: From drug discovery to climate modeling and financial forecasting
"We're building a fault-tolerant quantum computer that will transform industries," says IBM CEO Arvind Krishna. "This isn't just science - it's tomorrow's business reality."
The Quantum Race Heats Up
While Google and China have made quantum advances, IBM's modular approach and 2029 timeline position it as a leader in bringing quantum computing out of labs and into practical use.