Sydney start-up Q-CTRL launches open source quantum error suppression library
Sydney start-up Q-CTRL is releasing an open source library of error suppression controls for quantum computers.
Sydney start-up Q-CTRL is releasing an open source library of error suppression controls for quantum computers.
Five organisations have signed up to the government’s pilot Global Talent Scheme (GTS) program, launched in July in a bid to make it easier for big business and tech start-ups to hire overseas talent for highly skilled roles.
Sydney quantum technology company Q-Ctrl will be given cloud-based access to IBM’s quantum computers, as one of only eight start-ups globally to be invited to join Big Blue’s ‘Q Network’.
The new chip, Krzanich said, is “a major breakthrough for quantum computing” and comes just two months after Intel announced it had fabricated a 17-qubit test-chip.
The Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems (EQUS) was reborn yesterday, as it launched three new research projects aimed at building “quantum machines for practical applications”.