Google launched its latest quantum chip called Willow with strong error correction improvements and outlined its roadmap for quantum computing.

In a blog post, Google outlined Willow, which can reduce errors as it scales up using more qubits. Google called the advance a breakthrough that will make quantum systems more reliable.

According to Google, Willow performed a standard benchmark computation in under 5 minutes and outpaces today's fastest supercomputers by "10 septillion years." Google rated Willow on the random circuit sampling (RCS) benchmark.

Willow is part of Google's 10-year effort to build out its quantum AI operations. The company said Willow moves it along the path to commercially relevant applications.

Google's news is just part of a flurry of announcements that have landed in recent days.

Google said its approach is to focus on the quantity of qubits while scaling.

"We’re focusing on quality, not just quantity — because just producing larger numbers of qubits doesn’t help if they’re not high enough quality. With 105 qubits, Willow now has best-in-class performance across the two system benchmarks discussed above: quantum error correction and random circuit sampling. Such algorithmic benchmarks are the best way to measure overall chip performance."

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