Wistron Buys 32-Qubit Quantum Computer as It Targets Late-June CubeSat Launch
Updated
Updated · DIGITIMES · Jun 1
Wistron Buys 32-Qubit Quantum Computer as It Targets Late-June CubeSat Launch
3 articles · Updated · DIGITIMES · Jun 1
Wistron said it will pair a newly purchased 32-qubit quantum computer with conventional systems and launch its first in-house experimental CubeSat into low-Earth orbit in late June.
The twin projects are part of its push to build AI-era growth engines, with Chairman Simon Lin casting quantum computing as a niche complement to servers and accelerators rather than a replacement.
Millions of qubits would be needed for broad practical use, the company said, so near-term quantum applications are focused on specialized engineering problems, algorithms and encryption tasks.
On the space side, Wistron said its CubeSat program supports a national communications satellite manufacturing platform awarded in the third quarter of 2025 and is progressing on schedule.
That work is meant to help industrialize satellite manufacturing and position Wistron for future demand in communications infrastructure and satellite-enabled services.
How will Wistron's new ventures in space and quantum computing power its dominance in the global AI server market?
Is Wistron's quantum leap a visionary move for the AI era or a costly gamble on still-experimental technology?
Can Taiwan's infrastructure support the massive power demands of AI and quantum ambitions from giants like Wistron?