Skip to main content

You are not logged in. Your edit will be placed in a queue until it is peer reviewed.

We welcome edits that make the post easier to understand and more valuable for readers. Because community members review edits, please try to make the post substantially better than how you found it, for example, by fixing grammar or adding additional resources and hyperlinks.

Required fields*

8
  • $\begingroup$ The QOSF has a list of open source quantum computing software. $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 7, 2019 at 18:03
  • $\begingroup$ Sort-of "programming" related news: IBM announces 53 Qubit computer available next month, for use by the public. $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 19, 2019 at 22:26
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ Amazon Web Services adds Amazon Braket. Using Python and the Amazon Braket SDK you can write hybrid code that runs on conventional CPUs and Quantum Computers (with a choice of Rigetti, IonQ or D-Wave, with more to come). Free Tier and more details at the AWS Braket site. --- Eventually this comment will be added to the answer along with additional information, this makes bumping this answer less frequent. $\endgroup$ Commented Dec 7, 2019 at 23:39
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ It looks like Strangeworks may now also be a solution: stackoverflow.blog/2021/02/18/… $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 21, 2021 at 8:59
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ "NVIDIA CUDA-Q is an open-source platform for integrating and programming quantum processing units (QPUs), GPUs, and CPUs in one system. CUDA-Q enables GPU-accelerated system scalability and performance across heterogeneous QPU, CPU, GPU, and emulated quantum system elements.": nvidia.github.io/cuda-quantum/latest/releases.html $\endgroup$ Commented May 13, 2024 at 16:28