Thanks for the tip Chris! Arqit’s focus on stronger, simpler encryption for all networked devices is exactly what the quantum era needs to safeguard data for governments, enterprises, and everyday users.
I have heard a lot about Quantum and how it could solve all the AI infrastructure problems. Seems like a promising industry to me already. But I'm curious about the timeline reality check. I mean, I have heard 5 to 10 years, and recently, read an IBM interview that conveyed they have something more practical even right now.
Appreciate the insight! Quantum’s potential to ease AI infrastructure bottlenecks is exciting. IBM’s practical demos today are a great sign, but truly robust quantum machines are still some years away.
I’m pleased the walkthrough resonated. We’ve got deep dives on cybersecurity, EdTech, humanoid robots, and SpaceTech queued up—stay tuned for the weeks ahead! :)
Quantum computers promise breakthroughs, but the bar keeps rising as classical systems get faster and cheaper. Depending on who you ask, we’re “five to ten years away,” or only a few unexpected breakthroughs from a market reset.
You’re spot on! The race between quantum and classical hardware keeps everyone on their toes. Sounds like that conference had some eye‑opening insights. I’ll dive into your write‑up on commercializing quantum.
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Thanks for the tip Chris! Arqit’s focus on stronger, simpler encryption for all networked devices is exactly what the quantum era needs to safeguard data for governments, enterprises, and everyday users.
I have heard a lot about Quantum and how it could solve all the AI infrastructure problems. Seems like a promising industry to me already. But I'm curious about the timeline reality check. I mean, I have heard 5 to 10 years, and recently, read an IBM interview that conveyed they have something more practical even right now.
Thanks for putting this together, Petar!
Appreciate the insight! Quantum’s potential to ease AI infrastructure bottlenecks is exciting. IBM’s practical demos today are a great sign, but truly robust quantum machines are still some years away.
Okay so a few years it is then :)
I’ve been thinking about this a looking for a walkthrough of impact by industry, and it’s exactly what you provided! Very helpful, Petar.
I’m pleased the walkthrough resonated. We’ve got deep dives on cybersecurity, EdTech, humanoid robots, and SpaceTech queued up—stay tuned for the weeks ahead! :)
I look forward to it!
Great primer on quantum, Petar!
Quantum computers promise breakthroughs, but the bar keeps rising as classical systems get faster and cheaper. Depending on who you ask, we’re “five to ten years away,” or only a few unexpected breakthroughs from a market reset.
I went to a Commercialising Quantum conference this spring and it was fascinating to learn all the industries it could change. My take on it is here: https://millennialmasters.net/p/commercialising-quantum
You’re spot on! The race between quantum and classical hardware keeps everyone on their toes. Sounds like that conference had some eye‑opening insights. I’ll dive into your write‑up on commercializing quantum.