Chicago’s $1 billion quantum computer set to go live in 2028 – Bloomberg

PsiQuantum announced last year that it would spend a minimum of $1.09 billion to build the supercomputer and become the anchor tenant at the Chicago quantum and microelectronics park, a 128-acre project shepherded by Pritzker on the site of a shuttered US Steel plant.
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Fed up neighbor
8 months ago

Who’s going to man the hamster wheels

Hello, Indiana!
8 months ago

And powered by unicorn farts, good intentions and solar/ wind in IL, right? Wait until they tax Com Ed’s capacity to the limit and the residential consumers have to pay through the nose as other electric sources are necessarily sought out to pick up the slack. Com Ed isn’t going to supply you with power they had to purchase from another outlet without tacking on a handling fee, green taxes, the “ poor folks “ fees and all the other ways they screw you as detailed in the fine print of your monthly bill.

The Railroader
8 months ago

I hear the Lion Electric clock ticking down…

Frank Miller
8 months ago

“The relevant thing is now that the investors can very well make a profit even if the technology doesn’t work. What the startup can do then is to become a public company and sell shares on the stock market. But a lot of those quantum computing startups have no plausible way to ever generate revenue. They have no patents. They often don’t even have quantum computers, they might just say they’re developing software that one day might be run on technology that someone else builds. In the tech industry they call it vapourware. … By going public, these companies can… Read more »

Frank Miller
8 months ago

“It is one of very few technologies that you can view as a generationally important technology that’s on the brink of becoming real.”

Tells you everything you need to know – it’s not ‘real’. Just another grift.

Fed Up Taxpayer
8 months ago

Interesting the BlackRock backed company said it chose the location because of access to water and electricity. I thought these supercomputing sites were going to build their own power plants – or was that yesterdays news? More freebies for a company promising the world and JB too stupid to know the difference.

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Mark Glennon on AM560’s Morning Answer: Chicago pension buyout plan mostly shifts debt rather than eliminating it, property tax surge doubles inflation over three decades

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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