IBM hopes to do for its Power processor what it helped do for Linux: create a bigger market in which lots of vendors can play, and earn more money for IBM in the process. IBM hopes to do for its Power ...
IBM offers expanded access to quantum processors as developers prepare for the eventual challenge to Bitcoin's cryptography.
New IBM Telum II Processor and IBM Spyre Accelerator unlock capabilities for enterprise-scale AI, including large language models and generative AI Advanced I/O technology enables and simplifies a ...
IBM (IBM) said it has released the industry's first published quantum‑centric supercomputing reference architecture that outlines a practical, scalable path for combining quantum and classical ...
IBM (NYSE:IBM) on March 12, 2026 released its first reference architecture designed for quantum-centric supercomputing, outlining how quantum processors can be integrated with classical computing ...
‘It’s that combination of server, partners, etc. that delivers on that full-stack promise to ultimately deliver the outcome our clients need,’ says Bargav Balakrishnan, IBM Power product management ...
IBM’s plans for its Power server family promise faster and more programmable AI capabilities along with a new, more powerful processor. Highlights of the 2025 roadmap include: “Jointly designed by IBM ...
Big Blue plans to introduce a 64-processor server, the high-end pinnacle of efforts to reclaim its server crown from competitor Sun Microsystems. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and ...
IBM Rochester's business computers will be the first among Big Blue's product families to start using its newest and fastest processor, the Power5 chip. IBM this morning not only announced the new ...
IBM this week announced significant advancements in both quantum processors and platforms for quantum computing at its Quantum Summit 2023. In doing so, IBM highlighted several significant ...
The Power architecture doesn’t get the attention it deserves. With Power5 servers finally shipping, even non-Big Blue shops should take look again If all things were equal and IBM made its systems as ...