For the first time, 2025 will see quantum computers leave
labs and research institutions and actually deploy into the
networks and data centers of real-world customers. For quantum
computing companies, this will be a real test of steel.
It’s one thing to have a groundbreaking, powerful
quantum computer that only works on its very best day — when
the lab conditions are perfect and when the team of PhDs
operating it are at the top of their game. But the reality is that
quantum computers need to work on their worst days too — in
the real world, in real organizations. The quantum computing
companies that land on top will be the ones that have built for
this challenge since day one.
People tend to hear the words “quantum computing” and
jump straight to science fiction or the multiverse. And while it
seems daunting, we’ve actually reached a point where the
“quantum” part of quantum computing is the easiest bit — it’s
the “computing” that is inherently complex. For those on the
front lines of building powerful quantum computers, this means
it’s no longer a physics challenge — it’s an engineering one.
Companies won’t need to know the ins and outs of
quantum computers in order to leverage its unprecedented power
— they’ll simply benefit from its ability to solve the problems
that could never be solved on classical computers.
Internet:<thequantuminsider.com> (adapted).