News & Intel
The latest from the tech frontier — quantum breakthroughs, AI advances, cybersecurity threats, and the skills that matter.
The Fault-Tolerant Era Has Arrived: Quantum Computing's Biggest Year Yet
2026 marks the moment quantum computing stopped being "five years away." From Google's Willow chip to Harvard's fault-tolerance breakthroughs and D-Wave's scalable cryogenic controls, the industry has entered a new phase — one where adding qubits actually reduces errors instead of amplifying noise. Here's what it means for developers, security, and the future of code.
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AI Agents Are Writing Production Code — Should Junior Developers Be Worried?
Autonomous coding agents are shipping real features at major companies. We look at what this means for entry-level developers and why human problem-solving skills matter more than ever.
Q-Day Is Closer Than You Think: The Race to Quantum-Safe Encryption
Governments worldwide are scrambling to replace vulnerable cryptographic infrastructure as quantum processors inch closer to breaking RSA. What every developer needs to know about post-quantum cryptography.
WebAssembly 3.0: The Spec That Could Kill JavaScript's Monopoly
The latest WASM spec introduces garbage collection, stack switching, and native DOM access. Here's why some are calling it the most important web standard since HTML5.
The Skills Gap Is a Canyon: Why Companies Can't Find Developers Who Can Actually Build
Boot camps and tutorials produce syntax knowledge but not builders. A deep dive into what hiring managers actually look for and how hands-on project experience beats certificates.
Harvard's Quantum Hub: Three Startups, Billions in Investment, and a Timeline That Shocked Insiders
From QuEra shipping quantum computers to Japan to LightsynQ's networking breakthroughs, Harvard's Quantum Initiative is producing commercial results far ahead of schedule.
D-Wave's Cryogenic Control Breakthrough: One Chip to Rule All Qubits
D-Wave demonstrated scalable on-chip cryogenic control for gate-model qubits — an industry first that could finally make large-scale quantum computers commercially viable.
