Join a community committed to shaping the future of quantum computing.| IBM Research
Sign up for one of the informational sessions taking place 14-19 August to get a chance at hosting your very own Qiskit Fall Fest event.| IBM Research
We predict the quantum community will uncover quantum advantage by the end of 2026, but how will we know when it's arrived?| IBM Research
IBM Quantum Learning is moving to the new IBM Quantum Platform, and to celebrate, we’re releasing new content for Open Plan users.| IBM Research
Preview the hardware and software that will power the first demonstrations of quantum advantage at the second-annual IBM Quantum® Developer Conference.| IBM Research
IBM has developed a detailed framework for achieving large-scale fault-tolerant quantum computing by 2029, and we’re updating our roadmap to match.| IBM Research
Two new additions to the Qiskit Functions Catalog are the latest of many application functions that integrate quantum computing into application workflows.| IBM Research
Explore the past, present, and future of quantum computing| IBM Research
Newly completed series offers an in-depth, university-level intro to quantum computing fundamentals through four online courses.| IBM Research
The Quantum Optimization Working Group presents ten problem classes — an “intractable decathlon” — to enable the search for quantum advantage in optimization.| IBM Research
How Quantum Innovation Centers like Keio University in Tokyo are helping large enterprise research organizations explore utility-scale quantum computing.| IBM Research
An international coalition of universities has brought quantum education to over 2,400 students, and they're just getting started.| IBM Research
First chairholder, UdeS professor Cunlu Zhou discusses plans for algorithm discovery projects.| IBM Research
IBM isn’t just building quantum computers—we’re collaborating globally to help lay the groundwork for the quantum computing industry.| IBM Research
Recent publications deliver a fresh perspective on the potential for quantum computers to demonstrate value for interesting combinatorial optimization problems.| IBM Research