https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09526-6
In the last sentence of the abstract you will find:
"These results ... indicate a viable path to practical quantum advantage."
And in the conclusions:
"Although the random circuits used in the dynamic learning demonstration remain a toy model for Hamiltonians that are of practical relevance, the scheme is readily applicable to real physical systems."
So the press release is a little over-hyped. But this is real progress nonetheless (assuming the results actually hold up).
[UPDATE] It should be noted that this is still a very long way away from cracking RSA. That requires quantum error correction, which this work doesn't address at all. This work is in a completely different regime of quantum computing, looking for practical applications that use a quantum computer to simulate a physical quantum system faster than a classical computer can. The hardware improvements that produced progress in this area might be applicable to QEC some day, this is not direct progress towards implementing Shor's algorithm at all. So your crypto is still safe for the time being.
I'll add this to my list of useful phrases.
Q: Hey AndrewStephens, you promised that task would be completed two days ago. Can you finish it today?
A: Results indicate a viable path to success.
Even as a Googler I can find plenty of reasons to be cynical about Google (many involving AI), but the quantum computing research lab is not one of them. It's actual scientific research, funded (I assume) mostly out of advertising dollars, and it's not building something socially problematic. So why all the grief?
I turned 50 years old this year, forgive an old man a few chuckles.