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Karnataka aims to lead India's quantum computing revolution with investments in research, training centers, and hosting the ...
The National Quantum Mission spearheads India’s ambition to become a global leader in the field, with a strategic focus on AI ...
QpiAI has an aggressive development roadmap. The company aims to introduce a 64-qubit quantum machine (codenamed "Kaveri") by late 2026 or early 2027, with client access proposed shortly thereafter.
With this latest breakthrough, India’s quantum communications can now work in real-world combat zones, deserts, hillsides, ...
Equipped with 25 superconducting qubits, QpiAI-Indus is the country's first full-stack quantum computing system, integrating advanced quantum hardware, scalable control infrastructure, and AI ...
India’s quantum computing future India’s quantum push comes as the global market for quantum computing accelerates — from $1.79 billion in 2025 to $7.08 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of ...
What improvements do you believe are needed in India’s policy framework to foster the growth of quantum computing? India is at the cusp of a Quantum Leap and the path to Quantum Computing is closer ...
One initiative is focusing on the opportunities quantum computing presents, with the government providing ₹8000 crore ($1.12 billion) over a period of five years for the National Mission on ...
Quantum Computing: What It Is And Advances Made By India In a cabinet briefing, Union ministers Anurag Thakur and Jitendra Singh said that Rs 6003.65 crore would be allocated for the mission.
Explainer: India’s quantum computing ambitions. The states of different qubits, exhibiting superposition, can get entangled—they can be linked to each other via quantum mechanics.
India plans to invest $1bn over the next five years to advance its capabilities in quantum technology, but it will need to have a tailored approach and to address the skills gap to succeed ...
The U.S. currently enjoys a lead in quantum computing and can boast of hosting the most powerful quantum computer in the world (IBM’s Osprey with 433 qubits), but China is uncomfortably close ...