Quantum computing vendors are all bullish on hybrid supercomputing approaches that'll play well with the generative AI boom.

This hybrid mantra--with a heavy dose of commercial use cases today--started a year ago and has now become a common theme in the quantum computing industry. A few recent events include:

The catch with these hybrid HPC efforts is that the hardware is dramatically different. The good news, however, is that the software ecosystem around quantum computing is rapidly developing.

In recent research, Constellation Research analyst Holger Mueller noted that quantum networking and hardware advances have been critical. Mueller has argued that the industry would have seen the year of quantum computing if it weren't for the buzz around generative AI. The hardware side of quantum computing is reaching maturity, but software will be what bridges hybrid quantum-classical supercomputers. These quantum-classical supercomputers will likely be consumed as a service through cloud vendors.

He said:

"We are seeing the hardware side of quantum technology reaching stability and maturity through the quarters of 2024—so the focus switches to quantum software development kits (SDKs), the software libraries that map quantum problems to quantum hardware."

For now, CxOs should investigate use cases for quantum computing now and in the future, plan investments and realize how critical the software stack will be, said Mueller.