New IBM Telum II Processor and IBM Spyre Accelerator unlock capabilities for enterprise-scale AI, including large language models and generative AI Advanced I/O technology enables and simplifies a ...
There are lots of quantum computing start-ups, but IBM, America's first tech company, has led the pack since the 1970s, and is set to continue that dominance through 2026 and beyond.
IBM has announced its next-generation Telum II processor with a built-in AI accelerator for next-generation IBM Z mainframes that can handle both mission-critical tasks and AI workloads. The new ...
IBM (IBM) announced on Wednesday that it is on a path to deliver quantum advantage by the end of next year, and fault-tolerant quantum computing by 2029. In addition, the Armonk, N.Y.-based company ...
IBM on Tuesday announced a detailed roadmap to develop a large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer called Quantum Starling. Part of the company's plan involves the new IBM Quantum Nighthawk ...
IBM Telum II Processor: Designed to power next-generation IBM Z systems, the new IBM chip features increased frequency, memory capacity, a 40 percent growth in cache and integrated AI accelerator core ...
IBM on Tuesday announced a roadmap to develop a large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer called Quantum Starling. Part of the company's plan involves the new IBM Quantum Nighthawk processor, which ...
Power6's Live Partition Mobility makes it possible to move a Unix-based computer workload from one server to another while it is running IBM is introducing a new feature of its recently released ...
International Business Machines Corporation IBM recently unveiled IBM Quantum Nighthawk – the most advanced quantum processor developed to date. With an architecture that complements high-performing ...
IBM says quantum computing will be built on top of existing architecture, such as classical GPUs.
The Power architecture doesn’t get the attention it deserves. With Power5 servers finally shipping, even non-Big Blue shops should take look again If all things were equal and IBM made its systems as ...