


Innovate San Diego
[vc_row animation=””][vc_column animation=””][vc_column_text animation=””] Innovate San Diego [/vc_column_text][vc_column_text animation=””]This article features MemComputing as one of the most innovating companies in San Diego. MemComputing is a San Diego technology startup that is disrupting the high-performance computing market. Its proprietary MemCPU® Coprocessor technology makes virtually any computer faster than today’s most powerful supercomputer! MemComputing’s solutions are solving…
Quantum Computing Report
[vc_row animation=””][vc_column animation=””][vc_empty_space][vc_column_text animation=””] Classical Computing Fights Back! [/vc_column_text][vc_empty_space][vc_column_text animation=””]Something that gets lost in all the noise and hype associated with quantum computing is the fact that innovations in classical computing keep on coming. We’ve seen two recent examples that show how innovations in classical computing algorithms may be able provide competitive solutions for hard…
Deep dive into tomorrow’s super-connected world — 2019 Trends
[vc_row animation=””][vc_column animation=””][vc_column_text animation=””] New computing systems Today, we exploit known physical phenomena to efficiently compute difficult problems. The most recent example is quantum superposition and entanglement used by quantum computers. In contrast to bits in today’s computers which can be either the so-called qubits in quantum computers can represent various possible combinations of at…
Local startup aims to revolutionize computing industry
Mark Armao/The Daily Transcript Physicists Fabio Traversa (left) and Massimiliano Di Ventra (center) teamed up with serial entrepreneur John Beane two years ago to tackle some of the world’s most complex computational problems using a novel approach. Local startup aims to revolutionize computing industry Mark Armao Imagine you’re a salesperson. You plan on traveling to…
New Brain-Like Computer May Solve World’s Most Complex Math Problems
A new computer prototype called a “memcomputer” works by mimicking the human brain, and could one day perform notoriously complex tasks like breaking codes, scientists say. These new, brain-inspired computing devices also could help neuroscientists better understand the workings of the human brain, researchers say. In a conventional microchip, the processor, which executes computations, and the…