Impossible Chip Shocked Scientists | Canada’s 200B Ops/sec Could Kill Supercomputers

What if one tiny chip could challenge the world’s most powerful computers? Canada has unveiled a groundbreaking processor capable of 200 billion operations per second, and some experts say it could outperform both quantum and traditional supercomputers in certain tasks. In this video, we explore how this revolutionary chip works, why it’s creating massive buzz in the tech world, and what it means for the future of AI, computing power, and global technology competition. Is this truly the next computing revolution—or just hype? Watch until the end to discover the surprising truth behind Canada’s powerful new chip. Sources & References Nature Research Paper Nature Vol. 648, pp. 576–584 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09838-7 ArXiv Preprint Submitted Sept 11, 2025 arXiv: 2509.09581 Quantum & Computing Hardware D-Wave Advantage2 (4,400+ qubits) – dwavesys.com NVIDIA H100 GPU (3,958 TOPS INT8) – nvidia.com/h100 NTT CIM / LASOLV – science.org, ntt-review.jp Fujitsu Digital Annealer – fujitsu.com Toshiba SBM+ (1M variables) – toshiba.co.jp LightSolver photonic computing – lightsolver.com Research Benchmarks Max-Cut (Benlic & Hao 2013) QUBO Mapping – Andrew Lucas (2014) Additional Context Queen’s University – Bhavin Shastri HyperLight photonics – hyperlightcorp.com Canada quantum investment – canada.ca