podcast
details
.com
Print
Share
Look for any podcast host, guest or anyone
Search
Showing episodes and shows of
Javad Shabani
Shows
Enterprise Quantum Weekly
IonQ's Quantum Leap: Error-Corrected Computing Unleashes Enterprise Revolution
This is your Enterprise Quantum Weekly podcast.Hey there, quantum trailblazers, Leo here—your Learning Enhanced Operator—diving straight into the quantum storm that's electrifying Enterprise Quantum Weekly. Picture this: just yesterday, December 18th, IonQ dropped a bombshell with their error-corrected quantum computing breakthrough using EQC technology. It's not hype; it's a seismic shift toward scalable, fault-tolerant systems that could slash error rates in real-world qubits, making quantum practical for enterprises now.I'm in the chill of our dilution fridge lab at Inception Point, the air humming with cryogenic pumps, lasers slicing through vacuum chambers like scal...
2025-12-19
03 min
Advanced Quantum Deep Dives
Quantum Leaps: Germanium Superconductors, Photonic Links, and the Qubit Highway
This is your Advanced Quantum Deep Dives podcast.Hello everyone, I'm Leo, and welcome back to Advanced Quantum Deep Dives. Today I'm absolutely thrilled because we've hit a turning point in quantum computing that feels like watching dominoes line up perfectly before the big push.Just this week, researchers at Princeton unveiled something that made my heart race—a superconducting qubit that maintains stability more than three times longer than previous designs. But here's where it gets really interesting. Over at New York University, scientists did something that sounds like science fiction: they doped germanium with ga...
2025-11-30
03 min
Quantum Dev Digest
Quantum Leap: NYU Bridges Classical and Quantum Computing with Groundbreaking Semiconductor
This is your Quantum Dev Digest podcast.Hey everyone, Leo here. Buckle up, because what I'm about to tell you is genuinely transformative. Just yesterday, researchers at NYU pulled off something that's been eluding us for decades. They've created a semiconductor material that bridges two worlds we thought were completely separate: classical and quantum computing.Here's what happened. The team took germanium, a semiconductor we've used for decades, and replaced one in every eight atoms with gallium, a superconductor. The result? A superconducting material that still talks fluently with traditional silicon technology. Think of it like...
2025-11-30
02 min
Quantum Research Now
Quantum Leap: NYU's Superconductor Chip Unites Classical and Quantum Computing
This is your Quantum Research Now podcast.Welcome back to Quantum Research Now. I'm Leo, your Learning Enhanced Operator, and I've got something extraordinary to share with you today that's happening right now in November 2025.Picture this: you're holding a computer chip no bigger than your thumbnail, and inside it, you've got both classical computing AND quantum computing working together on the same piece of silicon. Sound like science fiction? It's not anymore. Scientists at New York University just achieved something remarkable. They've created a new semiconductor by replacing one in every eight germanium atoms with...
2025-11-30
02 min
The New Quantum Era - innovation in quantum computing, science and technology
Quantum Materials and Nano Fabrication with Javad Shabani
Quantum Materials and Nano-Fabrication with Javad ShabaniGuest: Dr. Javad Shabani is Professor of Physics at NYU, where he directs both the Center for Quantum Information Physics and the NYU Quantum Institute. He received his PhD from Princeton University in 2011, followed by postdoctoral research at Harvard and UC Santa Barbara in collaboration with Microsoft Research. His research focuses on novel states of matter at superconductor-semiconductor interfaces, mesoscopic physics in low-dimensional systems, and quantum device development. He is an expert in molecular beam epitaxy growth of hybrid quantum materials and has made pioneering contributions to understanding fractional...
2025-11-12
33 min
Quantum Basics Weekly
Quantum Education Surge: Democratizing the Future, from MIT to IBM
This is your Quantum Basics Weekly podcast.Hey there, quantum enthusiasts. Leo here, your Learning Enhanced Operator, coming to you from my lab where I've just been diving into some fascinating developments in quantum education that dropped this week.You know, there's something beautifully ironic happening right now in the quantum world. Just three days ago, on October 23rd, Bank of America Institute released a comprehensive report on quantum computing that's making waves. They're talking about achieving quantum advantage by solving real-world problems, and here's the kicker: they're projecting useful quantum computing applications by 2033. But what...
2025-10-26
04 min
NYU Langone Insights on Psychiatry
The Next Big Breakthrough
What if mental health care worked more like cancer treatment—tailored to the individual, informed by biology, and driven by data? Charles Marmar, MD, Chair of Psychiatry at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, takes us through the latest advances in precision psychiatry. From brain imaging to digital phenotyping, Dr. Marmar outlines the tools shaping a future where treatment is fully customized. He also shares stories from the front lines: a patient whose depression was treated with the help of a brain biopsy, why PTSD and depression aren’t one-size-fits-all, and how quantum computing could radically accelerate psychiatric research.
2025-05-21
43 min
The Connectivity Podcast
EP46: The next big thing in quantum computing
Javad Shabani is Assistant Professor of Physics and Director of the Center of Quantum Information Physics at New York University. He joins the podcast to share his expertise on the quantum development:The next big thing in quantum computingBreakthroughs in quantum communicationSustainability aspects Funding quantum researchQuantum computing in mobile networks
2024-02-20
21 min
The Connectivity Podcast
EP45: Quantum computing breakthroughs – in the lab and in real-life
Javad Shabani is Assistant Professor of Physics and Director of the Center of Quantum Information Physics at New York University. He joins the podcast to share his expertise on the quantum development:How close are we to some really cool stuff in this area – in the lab and in the real world?Quantum computing use casesInfrastructure limitationsQuantum Key DistributionCompeting for skills with big tech companies
2024-01-26
27 min