The Economist Technology Quarterly: Quantum Technologies and Their Applications
March 9, 2017
The Economist Technology Quarterly Q2 is focused on Quantum Technology and its applications such as a global network of communications links whose security is underwritten by unbreakable physical laws, sensors that can spot hidden nuclear submarines, and computers and software that can discover new drugs, revolutionise securities trading and design new materials.
Referencing a 2015 study by McKinsey, the piece highlights that there are 7,000 people worldwide with combined budget of $1.5bn working on quantum-technology research, 100€m of which comes from Canada.
“It doesn’t help to have a quantum computer if no one knows how to program it.”
– Tim Polk, The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
Although academic efforts to build quantum-computer hardware have been going on for two decades, until recently, comparatively little has been done to develop the software needed to run the machines when they come. That is changing, because in the past few years it has become clear that these machines are getting closer. Two parallel efforts are under way. One is to create software as generally understood—the graphical interfaces, programming languages and so on, a kind of “Windows for quantum”. The other is to develop novel algorithms, step-by-step instructions that break down problems into discrete parts amenable to quantum computing.
Innovation abounds in both camps, and among big tech firms as well as plucky startups. Some big players are working on both sides of the problem, and a growing ecosystem of quantum-friendly consultancies advises companies on what quantum computing might do for them.
The article goes on to highlight the new role companies such as 1QBit are playing between the quantum experts and industry, examining whether and how a given firm’s business might be improved by quantum methods, for example optimising trading strategies or supply chains, or monitoring network activity to spot cyber-attacks.
“By taking the lens of how you would formulate an algorithm on a quantum computer you often find very good improvements on classical algorithms, that’s where a lot of our successes comes from.”
– Landon Downs, President of 1QBit
The Economist Technology Quarterly – Quantum technology is beginning to come into its own
Most Recent News
How RBS Made a Quantum Leap into the Future
July 5, 2020 – The Sunday Times “In the shadow of a giant airship hangar on a defunct navy base in Silicon Valley, Ross McEwan sat down for a presentation about the future. It was 2015, and the then boss of Royal Bank of Scotland already had his hands full...
XrAI Trans Canadian Roll Out To Fight COVID-19
1QBit and Canadian health care providers team up to empower front-line clinicians with Health Canada’s first approved AI tool for radiology in the fight against COVID-19 Health and technology providers have joined forces to deploy XrAI, a machine learning tool that...
1QBit and Saskatchewan Health Authority Announce XrAI Chest Radiography Tool Deployment with Unprecedented Health Canada Regulatory Approval
Radiologist-created AI diagnostic product completes clinical trials, secures regulatory clearance, and goes live in response to the COVID-19 crisis. Vancouver, BC – April 8, 2020 – 1QBit, a world leader in advanced computing and software development, today announced...
Microsoft Partners with 1QBit, Honeywell, IonQ, and QCI on Azure Quantum
Today, Microsoft Quantum announced Azure Quantum, a full-stack, open cloud ecosystem that will bring the benefits of quantum computing to people and organizations around the world. The announcement highlighted the work done by partners such as 1QBit, Honeywell, IonQ,...
1QBit to Open Sherbrooke Office in Partnership with Université de Sherbrooke
Company expands to third quantum computing research hub in Canada Vancouver, BC – October 31, 2019 – 1QBit, a world leader in quantum computing software and hardware optimization, today announced that the company will be expanding its Canadian footprint by opening a...