Remember the K -- the Fujitsu supercomputer that promised to do a whopping ten petaflops by the year 2012? Well, it hasn't reached that threshold just yet, but according to the latest Top 500 ...
Your new doctor could be an artificial intelligent (AI) computer system from Japanese electronics giant Fujitsu – whether or not it will wear a white coat is unknown. The company has announced a new ...
KAWASAKI, Japan, Aug 1, 2025 - (JCN Newswire) - - Fujitsu today announced that it has started research and development towards a superconducting quantum computer with a capacity exceeding 10,000 ...
While most computer companies don’t want their customers fiddling around with the inner workings of their products, Fujitsu has opted to instead embrace the growing DIY demo, launching a ...
Kawasaki and Wako, Japan, April 22, 2025 — Fujitsu Limited and RIKEN announced the development of a 256-qubit superconducting quantum computer, established at the RIKEN RQC-FUJITSU Collaboration ...
SUNNYVALE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Fujitsu Computer Products of America, the leader in imaging solutions, today announced the Fujitsu fi-8000 series of enterprise scanners. With more than 13 million ...
The two organisations have created a new quantum computer and a simulator to improve research into how to mitigate the errors these powerful machines are prone to. Japan has received a new quantum ...
Chinese cloud company Baidu has launched its first quantum computer, while Japan’s Fujitsu is aiming to commercialize its own quantum hardware next year. This week Baidu announced its first ...
More pressure has been heaped on the government to reconsider its work with Fujitsu, but despite the supplier’s involvement in the Post Office scandal, its deep roots mean it maintains its grip on the ...
A Japanese consortium of research partners has won an award for the successful development of a high-performance hybrid-quantum computing platform. The consortium is formed of Riken, Fujitsu, NTT, ...
The government’s starting point for negotiating Fujitsu’s contribution to the costs of the Post Office scandal should be a 50:50 split, according to the chair of a Parliamentary select committee.