Category: English

  • After Jiuzhang 4.0: How Long Can China’s Global Lead in Quantum Computing Last?

    Let’s get one thing straight right away: the numbers coming out of Hefei this month are absolutely insane. I mean, we’re talking about a machine that solves in 25 microseconds what would take the world’s fastest supercomputer longer than the age of the universe to finish. That’s not a typo. Twenty-five microseconds versus ten to the forty-second power years.

    China just unveiled Jiuzhang 4.0, its latest photonic quantum computing prototype, and it’s safe to say the rest of the world is scrambling to catch up. The machine manipulates and detects up to 3,050 photons at once, a massive leap from the 255 photons achieved by its predecessor Jiuzhang 3.0 back in 2023. A research team led by Pan Jianwei and Lu Chaoyang at the University of Science and Technology of China, together with several other domestic institutions, built this thing. They published their results in Nature on May 13, 2026, and the quantum world hasn’t stopped buzzing since.

    But here’s the million-dollar question everyone’s asking: how long can China actually hold onto this lead?

    Before we try to answer that, let’s appreciate what Jiuzhang 4.0 actually did. The team solved a major headache that’s been plaguing photonic quantum computing for years: photon loss. As optical networks get bigger and more complex, photons have a nasty habit of getting lost in the maze, which kills your computational power. The researchers developed a spatiotemporal hybrid-coding architecture that lets photons interact across both time and space dimensions, boosting connectivity while keeping the physical device size manageable. They achieved a source efficiency of 92 percent and an overall system efficiency of 51 percent. That’s a breakthrough in low-loss photonic quantum information processing.

    To put the performance in perspective: the machine completes a Gaussian boson sampling task in 25 microseconds. The world’s most powerful supercomputer, the US-built El Capitan, would need over ten to the forty-second power years to do the same job using the best known classical algorithms. That’s a quantum advantage ratio of ten to the fifty-fourth power.

    But here’s the thing that really separates China from the pack. Most countries are betting on one main technology path for quantum computing. China is running two full-speed in parallel.

    Jiuzhang 4.0 represents the photonic path. But China also has the Zuchongzhi series for superconducting quantum computing. In 2025, Chinese scientists unveiled Zuchongzhi 3.0, a 105-qubit superconducting processor with 182 couplers, boasting single-qubit gate fidelity of 99.90 percent and two-qubit gate fidelity of 99.62 percent. The achievement set a new record in quantum computational advantage within superconducting systems, processing quantum random circuit sampling tasks at speeds a quadrillion times faster than the world’s most powerful supercomputer, and a million times faster than Google’s latest results published in Nature in October 2024.

    China became the only country in the world to achieve quantum computational advantage on two mainstream technical routes back in 2021, and they’ve only widened that gap since.

    Now, from an outsider’s perspective, watching the US-China quantum race unfold is like watching two heavyweight boxers with completely different fighting styles. And right now, the Chinese fighter looks like he’s got way more gas in the tank.

    The investment numbers are staggering. According to testimony before the US House Committee on Science, Space and Technology in January 2026, the Chinese Communist Party invested more than four times what the United States did in quantum research and development in 2024. In 2025, China announced a 138 billion dollar fund to support public-private partnerships in emerging technologies, including quantum computing. That’s not pocket change. China has committed an estimated 15 billion dollars to quantum technology overall, which is about four times what the US government has invested so far.

    China’s approach is highly centralized and state-directed. Quantum computing is listed as one of the top seven future industries in the country’s latest Five-Year Plan. Meanwhile, the US model is much more fragmented: a network of over forty companies, national labs, universities, and hyperscale cloud providers, with government support focused on funding, benchmarking, and verification rather than picking national champions.

    China also leads in quantum patent applications, accounting for about 60 percent of the global total, and produces a much higher volume of academic research output in the field.

    But let me pause here and give you the other side of the coin, because anyone who tells you this race is already over either doesn’t understand quantum computing or is trying to sell you something.

    The US still has some serious advantages. The American innovation ecosystem is more diverse, with deep private sector pockets. Big tech companies are investing heavily across multiple quantum hardware approaches, and that diversity could prove crucial as the industry matures. A fragmented model allows for faster experimentation and breakthrough innovation, even if it lacks the scale and coordination of China’s state-led approach.

    Google made headlines in October 2025 when its Willow chip, running a new algorithm called Quantum Echoes, became the first quantum computer to execute a verifiable algorithm with real-world applications. Willow completed a molecular structure calculation in just 2.1 hours that would have taken the Frontier supercomputer 3.2 years, a speedup of about 13,000 times. The algorithm can simulate molecular interactions with nuclear magnetic resonance-style precision, opening up new possibilities for drug discovery, materials science, and chemical simulation.

    The work was led by Michel Devoret, a Yale physicist who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2025 for foundational work in quantum control and superconducting circuits. Google’s engineering vice president, Hartmut Neven, expressed optimism about achieving practical quantum computing applications within five years using the Quantum Echoes algorithm.

    So the US is not exactly sitting on its hands.

    What makes this race so hard to call is that we’re still in the early days. The global scientific community has outlined a three-step roadmap for quantum computing development. Step one is achieving quantum supremacy, which both the US and China have done. Step two involves developing quantum simulators with hundreds of controllable qubits to tackle real-world problems beyond the capabilities of supercomputers. Step three focuses on substantially improving qubit control precision, integration scale, and error correction to develop programmable, general-purpose quantum computers.

    We’re somewhere between steps one and two. And step three is where the real battle will be won.

    China’s biggest challenge moving forward might not be technical at all. It might be commercial. The gap between research output and global commercial competitiveness remains a defining strategic challenge for the country. China’s quantum companies are mostly spinouts from Chinese Academy of Sciences labs and elite universities, brought to market on state-guided capital, provincial procurement contracts, and state-owned enterprise backing. A few private venture capitalists are now showing up, but the engine is industrial policy, not market forces.

    In contrast, the US already has companies generating early revenue through government contracts, corporate pilot projects, and quantum-computing-as-a-service platforms. One Fortune 100 company achieved about a 20 percent performance improvement using quantum optimization techniques, according to an investment report.

    The US also maintains a lead in innovation diversity. Jefferies, the investment bank, published a report predicting a broader commercial inflection point between 2028 and 2030. Their assessment is that while China may have near-term advantages in scale and coordination, the US’s decentralized innovation ecosystem could ultimately play a decisive role in shaping the long-term leadership in the global quantum computing race.

    There’s also the supply chain issue. US export controls on QuantumCTek, several Chinese Academy of Sciences institutes, and a string of supply-chain firms were meant to slow China down. The effect has arguably been the opposite: it triggered a crash program in domestic dilution refrigerators, low-temperature electronics, and photonic components. China’s superconducting quantum computer test system, dilution refrigerator, and other key equipment have broken long-term foreign technology monopolies, achieving core hardware autonomy. But the question is whether this self-sufficiency drive can keep pace with the rapid advances happening elsewhere.

    And then there’s the talent question. China graduates more STEM PhDs than the US, but the US has traditionally been the global destination for top quantum talent. However, that’s changing. US Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren pointed out in her January 2026 hearing statement that the Trump administration was simultaneously turning away foreign talent while canceling programs to train domestic talent, increasing pressure on foreign talent through visa fees, rejections, and intimidation. She warned that if the United States is not the destination for global quantum talent, other nations certainly will be.

    So how long can China’s lead last?

    Based on everything I’ve seen, here’s my honest assessment: China is likely to maintain a significant advantage in photonic quantum computing for the foreseeable future. Jiuzhang 4.0 is not a one-off fluke; it’s the latest in a series of consistent, incremental breakthroughs going back to 2020. The team has demonstrated an ability to solve hard engineering problems that have stumped other research groups, and they show no signs of slowing down.

    In superconducting quantum computing, the race is much closer. Zuchongzhi 3.0 is an impressive machine, but Google’s Willow chip, with its Quantum Echoes algorithm, represents a different kind of breakthrough: one focused on verifiable, real-world applications rather than just raw supremacy demonstrations. The Chinese are excellent at scaling up qubit counts and demonstrating computational advantage on carefully chosen benchmark problems. But the Americans are arguably ahead in thinking about practical applications and error correction, the two things that will ultimately determine who builds a useful, fault-tolerant quantum computer first.

    Where China has a decisive edge is in its dual-track strategy and its investment commitment. Running two major technical paths in parallel is extremely expensive, but it also hedges against the risk that one path hits a dead end. And as long as China continues to outspend the US by a factor of four, that advantage compounds over time.

    However, I wouldn’t bet against American innovation. Every time people have counted the US out in a technology race, from semiconductors to AI, they’ve been proven wrong. The US ecosystem is messy and fragmented, but that messiness has a way of producing unexpected breakthroughs. Google’s work on verifiable quantum advantage, led by a Nobel laureate, is exactly the kind of thing that can flip a race overnight.

    If I had to make a prediction, I’d say this: China will likely maintain a clear lead in quantum supremacy metrics for the next three to five years. They’ve built a machine that is, by any objective measure, the most powerful quantum computer ever constructed for its specific task. And they’ve done it twice, on two different technologies.

    But the real prize isn’t quantum supremacy. The real prize is fault-tolerant, general-purpose quantum computing. That’s probably still a decade away or more. And when we get there, the race will be decided by factors that go beyond just qubit counts and speed comparisons: error correction, software ecosystems, commercial adoption, and supply chain resilience.

    Right now, China leads in quantity and scale. The US leads in diversity and practical application thinking. Japan, with its 7.21 billion dollars in public investment, is also a serious player that sometimes gets overlooked.

    The honest answer to “how long can China’s lead last?” is that nobody really knows. We’re watching a race where the finish line keeps moving. What’s certain is that both countries are treating quantum computing as a strategic asset of the highest order, on par with AI and semiconductors. The investments are huge. The stakes are massive. And the breakthroughs keep coming faster than most experts predicted even two years ago.

    One thing is for sure: the team in Hefei isn’t resting on its laurels. And neither is anyone else.

  • 2026 Tech Trends: 5 Game-Changing Domains That Will Reshape Our Lives

    Let’s be real for a second. Every single year, some tech guru pops up on LinkedIn with a list of predictions that sounds like it was written by a chatbot that just watched five sci-fi movies back to back. You know the type: vague, jargon-heavy, and completely disconnected from how actual human beings live their lives.

    But 2026 feels different. Not because the technology is less crazy — it’s actually way crazier — but because these aren’t “maybe someday” concepts anymore. These are tools, machines, and treatments that are rolling out right now, in real cities, used by real people.

    So let’s cut through the noise. Here are the five technology trends in 2026 that aren’t just hype. These are the ones that are actually going to change the way you drive, work, heal, and maybe even who you come home to at night.


    1. Robotaxis Have Finally Arrived — And They’re Fighting for Your Fare

    Remember when everyone laughed at self-driving cars? “Sure, Elon, maybe in 2050.” Well, the joke’s on us, because 2026 is the year autonomous ride-hailing officially became a real business, not just a science experiment.

    In January 2026, Tesla flipped the switch on its fully driverless robotaxi fleet in Austin, Texas. No safety driver behind the wheel. Just a steering wheel that no one was touching, ferrying paying passengers across the city. And they didn’t stop in Austin. By late spring, the service expanded to Dallas and Houston as well, with about two dozen unsupervised vehicles now operating across those three major Texan cities.

    But Tesla isn’t the only player in town. Waymo, Alphabet’s self-driving unit, has been quietly building a massive lead. While Tesla is still scaling up, Waymo already operates across ten US cities and has reached an incredible milestone — half a million rides per week. Half a million. That’s not a beta test. That’s a transportation network. In fact, the company’s monthly orders have reportedly surpassed two million rides across all its operational cities. And they’re not stopping there. Waymo plans to add more than two thousand new autonomous vehicles to its fleet in 2026, expanding into Dallas, Denver, and eventually even London.

    What does this mean for you? If you live in a major American city, you can probably already summon a car that has no driver, no awkward small talk, and no tip screen guilt-tripping you. It’s cleaner, cheaper, and frankly less stressful than praying your Uber driver knows how to merge onto the freeway. The technology still has kinks to work out — Tesla’s system still requires human supervision in some areas, and neither company is perfect yet — but the momentum is undeniable. The robotaxi wars are here, and consumers are winning.


    2. Quantum Computing Is No Longer “Twenty Years Away” — It’s Running Pharma Trials Right Now

    There’s an old joke in tech circles: quantum computing is always twenty years away, and it always will be. Well, 2026 is the year that joke stopped being funny, because quantum computing just got real.

    IBM CEO Arvind Krishna made a pretty bold statement earlier this year. He said that 2026 is the year we’ll see the first real-world examples of quantum advantage — meaning quantum computers actually solving problems that classical supercomputers simply cannot handle. And he had receipts. IBM’s quantum hardware, in partnership with the Cleveland Clinic, successfully simulated a molecular system containing three hundred atoms. That’s a scale that’s massively difficult for traditional computers to model with any accuracy, and it’s a huge deal for pharmaceutical research. Being able to simulate complex molecules at that level could slash the time it takes to discover new drugs from years to months.

    Meanwhile, the error correction problem — which has been the single biggest obstacle holding quantum back — saw major breakthroughs in 2026. Researchers at Caltech and the quantum computing firm Oratomic figured out how to reduce the number of physical qubits needed for a single reliable logical qubit from twelve down to just four. That’s a massive leap in efficiency. Another team from SpinQ and Hong Kong University of Science and Technology raised the fault-tolerance threshold from 1.56% to 4.35%, which doesn’t sound like much until you realize it exponentially speeds up error suppression.

    There’s even a consumer-facing quantum app now. At CES 2026, SuperQ Quantum debuted ChatQLM, billed as the world’s first quantum-powered consumer application. We’re still in the very early days, and you probably won’t have a quantum laptop anytime soon. But in the background, quantum computers are already starting to quietly revolutionize materials science, financial modeling, and drug discovery. By the time you feel the effects in your daily life, the revolution will already be well underway.


    3. AI Agents Stop Being Chatbots and Start Being Coworkers

    Let’s be honest: for the past couple of years, most “AI” has been glorified autocomplete. You’d ask ChatGPT to write an email, it would hallucinate a few facts, and you’d spend just as much time fact-checking as you would have writing it yourself.

    2026 is the year that changes. We’re moving from generative AI to agentic AI — systems that don’t just generate text but actually take action, make decisions, and work alongside you like a junior colleague.

    According to a major IEEE global survey, ninety-six percent of technology experts believe that agentic AI innovation will continue advancing at lightning speed in 2026. And they’re not just talking about business applications. The same survey found that over half of experts predict agentic AI will become nearly ubiquitous in consumer applications like personal scheduling and calendar management. Forty-five percent expect widespread adoption for data privacy management, and forty-one percent for health monitoring and home automation like grocery shopping.

    In the workplace, the shift is even more dramatic. Google’s 2026 AI Business Report found that AI agents are already saving employees roughly forty minutes per interaction by handling routine tasks. McKinsey’s Global Tech Agenda reported that forward-thinking CIOs are investing heavily in agentic automation to fundamentally change how business gets done. Nearly thirty percent of fast-growing companies plan to increase their tech budgets by more than ten percent in 2026, with much of that money going directly into agentic AI systems.

    But here’s the part that really gets interesting: emotional intelligence. The next generation of AI companions isn’t just about efficiency. It’s about connection. Amazon CTO Werner Vogels predicted that companion robots will help address the loneliness epidemic, and in 2026, those companions are moving substantially from text to voice and video. Whether it’s an AI that keeps an elderly relative company, helps a child with homework, or just gives you someone to vent to after a long day — these systems are becoming genuinely emotionally aware. It’s a little strange, sure. But for a lot of people, it’s also deeply needed.


    4. General-Purpose Robots Leave the Factory and Enter Your World

    For decades, robots lived in cages. Welding car doors in automotive plants. Picking items in Amazon warehouses. They were big, dangerous, and strictly separated from humans.

    That era is ending in 2026. The US Government Accountability Office recently published a report on emerging technologies that will affect society over the next decade, and general-purpose robots were front and center. These aren’t the single-purpose machines we’re used to. These are flexible, adaptable robots that can learn new tasks, assist with infrastructure maintenance, help with disaster response, and eventually, maybe help around your house.

    The IEEE survey found that seventy-seven percent of technology experts believe humanoid robots will become relatively mundane presences in workplaces over time. Not “wow, a robot!” but “oh, that’s just Steve from accounting — except Steve is made of metal and doesn’t complain about the coffee.” More than half of the experts surveyed said robotics will be the field most impacted by AI in 2026, outpacing even autonomous driving and extended reality.

    What does this look like in practice? In Japan and parts of Europe, companion robots are already being deployed in elder care facilities, helping with mobility, medication reminders, and conversation. In warehouses, next-generation robots are working side by side with human pickers, not separated by safety cages. And in hazardous environments — think nuclear cleanup or disaster zones — robots are taking on risks that no human should have to take.

    We’re still a few years away from the Rosie the Robot dream of a household robot that does your dishes and folds your laundry. But 2026 is the year that robots stopped being “over there” and started being “right here.”


    5. Personalized Gene Editing Moves From One Miracle Baby to Millions of Patients

    If you haven’t heard the story of baby KJ yet, you need to. Kyle “KJ” Muldoon Jr. was born with a devastating rare genetic disorder called CPS1 deficiency. His body couldn’t remove toxic ammonia from his blood. He was lethargic, at risk of brain damage, and facing a liver transplant just to survive.

    Instead of a transplant, doctors at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia offered his parents something never attempted before: a personalized gene-editing therapy, designed specifically for KJ’s unique genetic mutation, using a form of CRISPR called base editing. They designed the treatment, tested it in human cells, mice, and monkeys, and then gave it to KJ when he was seven months old.

    Today, KJ is doing great. He’s meeting all his developmental milestones. He’s a happy kid with a normal life ahead of him. And his case — which MIT Technology Review named one of the ten breakthrough technologies of 2026 — has completely changed how the medical world thinks about personalized genetic medicine.

    The cost of KJ’s treatment was comparable to a liver transplant, around a million dollars. That’s obviously not accessible for most people. But the researchers believe that within a few years, the price could drop to a few hundred thousand dollars per treatment. And in January 2026, Nobel laureate Jennifer Doudna co-founded a new company called Aurora Therapeutics, backed by sixteen million dollars in seed funding, specifically to industrialize this process. Instead of designing one bespoke therapy for one patient at a time, Aurora wants to build a platform that can develop many personalized gene-editing therapies in parallel, using emerging FDA regulatory frameworks to group multiple genetic mutations together under unified development pathways.

    The FDA itself is helping to clear the path. In February 2026, the agency announced a new “plausible mechanism” framework designed to accelerate development of highly personalized genetic treatments. And researchers are already applying it. A team at CHOP recently tested a flexible prime editing system that can be quickly adapted to correct genetic variants causing multiple urea cycle disorders, using the new FDA guidance as their roadmap.

    This isn’t science fiction anymore. It’s not even “experimental” in the way that phrase usually means. This is real medicine, being delivered to real children, right now. And while gene editing is expensive and complicated and raises plenty of ethical questions, the trajectory is clear: we are entering an era where your treatment can be tailored to your exact DNA. For millions of people with rare diseases who currently have no options at all, that’s not just exciting. It’s everything.


    So What Does All This Mean for You?

    Look, here’s the honest truth. Technology doesn’t change the world in a day. It doesn’t even change it in a year. You’re probably not going to wake up tomorrow morning and find a robot making your breakfast while your quantum computer solves world hunger.

    But you might notice, over the course of 2026, that your Uber doesn’t have a driver. That your doctor mentions a genetic test you’ve never heard of before. That your new coworker is an AI agent that actually helps instead of annoying you. That the news is talking about quantum computing like it’s a real thing, not a distant dream.

    And that’s how revolutions actually happen. Not with a bang, but with a quiet accumulation of “oh, that’s new” moments. 2026 is the year a lot of those moments start stacking up.

    The future isn’t coming. For better or worse, it’s already here. You might as well buckle up.