QuEra Computing has responded to surging demand by quadrupling the availability of its Aquila quantum computer on Amazon Braket. Quantum Machines unveiled the OPX1000, a quantum controller with the capacity to manage over 1,000 qubits, marking a significant leap in scaling quantum hardware. IQM Quantum Computers is democratizing quantum access with "IQM Spark," a quantum computing solution aimed at universities and research labs. It includes a 5-qubit quantum processing unit, fostering quantum exploration and experimentation among academic and scientific communities (democratizing as long as you have 1M€ available). In the quest to validate quantum computational advantage reliably, researchers at NIST, UC Berkeley, Caltech, and other institutions introduced a novel protocol that leverages mid-circuit measurements and cryptographic techniques. Finally, SK Telecom is taking a proactive role in developing international standards for quantum-safe communication, ensuring the security of data transmission in the age of quantum technology. NIST released another factsheet for PQC adoption. A qubit based on Lorenz attractors has been proposed, and a fantastic conversation on the quantum stack overflow about D-wave’s advantage claims.
Share this post
The Week in Quantum Computing - September 4th
Share this post
QuEra Computing has responded to surging demand by quadrupling the availability of its Aquila quantum computer on Amazon Braket. Quantum Machines unveiled the OPX1000, a quantum controller with the capacity to manage over 1,000 qubits, marking a significant leap in scaling quantum hardware. IQM Quantum Computers is democratizing quantum access with "IQM Spark," a quantum computing solution aimed at universities and research labs. It includes a 5-qubit quantum processing unit, fostering quantum exploration and experimentation among academic and scientific communities (democratizing as long as you have 1M€ available). In the quest to validate quantum computational advantage reliably, researchers at NIST, UC Berkeley, Caltech, and other institutions introduced a novel protocol that leverages mid-circuit measurements and cryptographic techniques. Finally, SK Telecom is taking a proactive role in developing international standards for quantum-safe communication, ensuring the security of data transmission in the age of quantum technology. NIST released another factsheet for PQC adoption. A qubit based on Lorenz attractors has been proposed, and a fantastic conversation on the quantum stack overflow about D-wave’s advantage claims.