News

Integrated quantum computing company Quantinuum Ltd. today unveiled new open-source software tools designed to accelerate ...
ORNL researchers have outlined a vision to integrate quantum computers with today’s supercomputing systems, focusing on a ...
Programming quantum computers is becoming easier: computer scientists at ETH Zurich have designed the first programming language that can be used to program quantum computers as simply, reliably ...
At first glance, biology and quantum technology seem incompatible. Living systems operate in warm, noisy environments full of ...
Fresh from ETH Zurich comes the new Silq programming language. They also have submitted a paper to the PLDI 2020 conference on why they feel that it is the best quantum programming language so far ...
Quantum programming languages like Q# from Microsoft, Qiskit from IBM or Cirq from Google primarily operate at the gate or building-block level.
When the first true quantum computer is one day realised, it will be completely useless. For it to prove its worth as a potentially world-changing problem solver, it will need to run software.
Someday, somehow, quantum computing is going to change the world as we know it. Even the lamest quantum computer is orders of magnitude more powerful than anything we could ever make today. But ...
Then, of course, you need to program them. A while back I took a first look at Q#, Microsoft’s experimental quantum computing programming language.