PsiQuantum has commenced the construction of a fault-tolerant quantum computing facility in Chicago, aiming for a capacity of one million quantum bits. According to BlockBeats, the facility employs photonic quantum computing technology, leveraging established semiconductor, fiber optic, and cooling technologies for scalability. The construction is progressing rapidly, with 500 tons of steel structures erected within days. The first phase is expected to be partially completed around 2027, with full operation targeted by 2028. The facility's computing power is equivalent to billions of traditional computers and is intended to support next-generation AI supercomputing.
The crypto community is currently focused on the potential of this technology to compromise Bitcoin. PsiQuantum co-founder Terry Rudolph has clarified that there is no intention to use quantum computing to attack Bitcoin, and the company's large scale prevents secretive operations. Discussions about quantum threats have intensified recently, with the Bitcoin community considering a hard fork as a countermeasure. The largest quantum computer globally has only 6,100 qubits, far from the practical threshold, posing limited short-term threats to Bitcoin.