Much like the Lumière brothers’ train, quantum computing is rushing toward the public—and users aren’t likely anticipating the changes in store. At this year’s CES, Murray Thom, VP of quantum technology evangelism at D-Wave Quantum, told IT Brew that he feels people overcomplicate their thinking about quantum computing: “It’s energy-efficient compute for very hard problems.” For D-Wave’s customers, he added, the technology’s applications are already streamlining processes and boosting efficiency, saving manpower hours for Pattison Food Group and helping Japanese phone operator NTT Docomo reduce paging signals. “Those are very real-world, tangible applications; they’re not research projects, we’re not doing abstract mathematical problems,” Thom said. “And it’s incorporated in their business.” What a quantum x AI looks like.—EH |