Oxford Quantum Circuits, a UK-based company, has introduced a new 32-qubit quantum computing system and is in the midst of a $100M Series B funding round led by Japan's SBI. Meanwhile, IBM has installed a 127-qubit quantum computing system at the University of Tokyo, marking a significant advancement in quantum computing. Additionally, Q-CTRL's performance control software has been integrated by IBM, bringing them closer to achieving quantum advantage.
The University of Tokyo has installed a 127-qubit #quantum computer https://t.co/1V7PECjDsB
Oxford Quantum Circuits launched Toshiko, the first enterprise-ready quantum computing platform, and secured $100M in Series B funding led by Japan’s SBI. https://t.co/1UCwUmC3ag
Integrating Q-CTRL’s performance control software, IBM moves a step closer to quantum advantage https://t.co/aRaCqJ6ZRF
The University of Tokyo has installed a 127-qubit #quantum computer https://t.co/1V7PECjDsB
IBM’s installation of a 127-qubit quantum computing system at the University of Tokyo marks a significant advancement in quantum computing. https://t.co/6ae2exBOys
UK-based Oxford Quantum Circuits, which offers quantum-computing-as-a-service, announces a new 32-qubit system and an ongoing $100M Series B led by Japan's SBI (@cate_lawrence / https://t.co/5BsBJf8Atd) https://t.co/u5asmyV0nz https://t.co/LiNYt9bdi4