Inside IBM’s Quest To Win The Quantum Computer Race

Investors are throwing money at quantum startups. Maybe they should be looking at a more venerable player that has a lot of practice building things.


Half a century ago, a factory in Poughkeepsie, New York, cranked out computer hardware. The profits from mainframes financed pampered employees, scientific research and a dividend that made International Business Machines the most valuable company on the planet.

Now, a diminished IBM gets most of its revenue from soft things: computer programs and business services. But it’s at work on a new kind of machine that could return Poughkeepsie to its glory days. This is where it will assemble quantum computers, the magical devices designed to tackle mathematical challenges that would overwhelm an ordinary computer.

If quantum delivers on its promises, engineers will use it to make giant strides in the design of drugs, vaccines, batteries and chemicals. Last year Boston Consulting Group predicted that come 2040, quantum hardware and software providers will be taking in $90 billion to $170 billion of annual revenue.

IBM has been part of this rapidly evolving technology since the turn of the century. Leading its effort: Jay Gambetta, a 46-year-old physicist from Australia who oversees 3,000 employees on six continents doing research. He will not stint quantum, since he has spent his entire career in that field.

Gambetta joined IBM’s Watson Research Center, 39 miles south of the Poughkeepsie factory, in 2011 after postdoc years at Yale and then on the faculty at the University of Waterloo. He says, “While I like teaching, really I wanted to build.”

There are a lot of ways to build a qubit, the information-storing element of a quantum computer, and any might lead to a winner in the race to construct a useful machine. Light’s photons are quantized, a discovery that got Albert Einstein a Nobel prize, and make up qubits in some experimental computers. Ions—charged atoms—can be the basis of a quantum system. Yet another angle involves electric currents flowing in tiny superconducting wires deposited onto slivers of silicon. Within three years of Gambetta’s arrival at Watson, he and his colleagues decided to bet on that third option, turning away from photonics, trapped ions and other avenues of research.

The superconducting approach involves a chip chilled to a seventieth of a degree above absolute zero, a necessity for the superconductor to work and the delicate dance of electrons to be protected from corrupting thermal noise. The chip’s operating elements, called transmons, are controlled by pulses of microwaves. Its marching orders come from a conventional computer sitting nearby.

It helps that the unimaginably low temperature can be had with devices bought off the shelf, that chip manufacturing is something IBM can do in-house and that the microwaves, which are much like the microwaves running a cellphone, are old hat to electrical engineers. “We don’t have to reinvent things,” Gambetta says. “We leveraged 50 years of radar and microwave technology to make beautiful, clean microwave notes that we play.”

Alongside IBM and a few other giant enterprises researching quantum computing are a bevy of startups making pronouncements about their breakthroughs and their futures. They all have a lot of work to do before anything of great commercial value emerges. That hasn’t stopped investors from flinging money at them.


How to Play It

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/baldwin/2025/11/25/inside-ibms-quest-to-win-the-quantum-computer-race/