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$\begingroup$ The QOSF has a list of open source quantum computing software. $\endgroup$Rob– Rob2019-07-07 18:03:02 +00:00Commented Jul 7, 2019 at 18:03
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$\begingroup$ Sort-of "programming" related news: IBM announces 53 Qubit computer available next month, for use by the public. $\endgroup$Rob– Rob2019-09-19 22:26:44 +00:00Commented Sep 19, 2019 at 22:26
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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. $\endgroup$Rob– Rob2019-12-07 23:39:29 +00:00Commented Dec 7, 2019 at 23:39
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1$\begingroup$ It looks like Strangeworks may now also be a solution: stackoverflow.blog/2021/02/18/… $\endgroup$Pro Q– Pro Q2021-02-21 08:59:56 +00:00Commented Feb 21, 2021 at 8:59
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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 $\endgroup$Rob– Rob2024-05-13 16:28:05 +00:00Commented May 13, 2024 at 16:28
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