The QEC room block closes on Friday, May 8th, and is filling quickly. I recommend registering for the conference if you haven't already, and then booking ASAP
Room block at: https://t.co/TsMn6crURY
Had some website troubles, so we're extending the early-bird deadline for QEC from tonight to Monday, April 27th. See https://t.co/vIlcSiqfOG for details. Sorry for the inconvenience.
The schedule for talks at QEC26 is now up on our website: https://t.co/6URxMSCy8y
The earlybird registration deadline is tomorrow, so sign up now! Looking forward to seeing you all in Santa Barbara
1. Early-bird registration ends April 24th, details at https://t.co/vIlcSiqfOG
2. Room block bookings must be in by May 8th, and are going to run out fast, details at
https://t.co/TsMn6crURY
The hotel block for QEC is now up on the website at https://t.co/TsMn6crURY
The bookings are somewhat limited and must be made by May 8th, which is sooner than you'd think. I recommend that if you know you'll be attending the conference, register and reserve your room ASAP!
Registration is now open for QEC26, to be held this June in sunny Santa Barbara, CA! see the registration page at https://t.co/KMkO866FcI for a link.
Also, the deadline for submissions is next Friday. Make sure to get those in and spread the word to friends and collaborators!
If you or your organisation is interested in sponsoring QEC26, please reach out to me as well and we can discuss the different sponsorship levels and opportunities we’ve set up!
Last week we put up the website for QEC26, which can be found at https://t.co/KMkO866FcI! It should have all conference information and deadline details needed, but if anything is missing please reach out to the admin email and we’ll get back to you asap.
Congrats to Michel Devoret, John Martinis, and John Clarke on the Nobel Prize in Physics. 🔬🥼 Michel is chief scientist of hardware at our Quantum AI lab and John Martinis led the hardware team for many years.
Their pioneering work in quantum mechanics in the 1980s made recent breakthroughs possible, and paved the way for error-corrected quantum computers to come.
I was just at our quantum lab in Santa Barbara yesterday seeing the incredible progress, hope they are celebrating today. Feeling lucky this morning to work at a company that has had 5 Nobel Laureates among our ranks - 3 prizes in 2 years!
This project started in 2022 when Adam and I wanted an excuse to understand the at-the-time unpublished work from Matt and Craig. Glad it’s finally out since I was struggling to talk about it at QEC23 in Sydney haha. Please take a look and enjoy the pretty pictures!
Picture yourself with a chip made of qubits, with couplers between them for two-qubit gates. In https://t.co/yKJCwkuIJ2, we outline a protocol called LUCI which adapts QEC circuits to chips where some of these components have been rendered non-functional.
In general, LUCI provides a very flexible framework allowing for anisotropic or aperiodic circuits, or ones that interchange data and measure qubit roles. They can even be randomly generated, while still guaranteeing matchability and fault-tolerance.