Cloud Quantum Platforms Open 1,121-Qubit Systems to Enterprises as Market Potential Reaches $250 Billion
Updated
Updated · InfoWorld · May 19
Cloud Quantum Platforms Open 1,121-Qubit Systems to Enterprises as Market Potential Reaches $250 Billion
5 articles · Updated · InfoWorld · May 19
Amazon Braket, Azure Quantum and IBM Quantum already let organizations access cloud-based quantum systems for optimization, simulation and modelling, even though current machines remain limited and error-prone.
Today’s noisy intermediate-scale hardware typically spans 50 to 1,000 physical qubits, with the largest system at 1,121 qubits, so most enterprise pilots still pair quantum steps with classical computing.
Bain estimates quantum computing’s market potential at $100 billion to $250 billion, with early enterprise targets including logistics, machine learning, drug discovery and financial modeling; pilot projects can cost $150,000 to $450,000.
IBM is targeting fault-tolerant quantum computing by 2029, while broader application-scale systems may not arrive until the 2030s; 59% of executives surveyed by IBM expect quantum-enabled AI to transform their industry by 2030, but only 27% expect to use quantum computing.
Security is the more immediate pressure point: experts urge companies to start post-quantum cryptography upgrades now because data encrypted today could be harvested and decrypted later when Q-Day arrives.
As quantum and AI demand huge investment, must companies choose between seizing future opportunities and defending against immediate threats?
With Q-Day's timeline rapidly shrinking, how can critical infrastructure with decades-long lifecycles be secured in time?
How can we govern autonomous agentic AI when existing frameworks are already considered inadequate for its unique risks?
Breaking the 1,000-Qubit Barrier: IBM Condor’s Impact on Quantum Hardware, Enterprise Adoption, and Market Leadership
Overview
In late 2023, IBM unveiled Condor, its 1,121-qubit quantum processor, marking a major leap in quantum hardware by surpassing the 1,000-qubit barrier for the first time. Condor was celebrated as an innovation milestone and became the world’s first publicly announced superconducting quantum chip of this scale. Leveraging IBM’s proprietary cross-resonance gate technology, Condor not only pushes the boundaries of quantum hardware but also focuses on making quantum software development more accessible. By integrating the open-source Qiskit framework, IBM has made the Condor system easier to program, supporting broader adoption and advancing the pursuit of practical quantum computing.