Waiting for quantum computers to arrive, software engineers get creative
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[April 17, 2023] By
Jane Lanhee Lee
OAKLAND, Calif. (Reuters) - Quantum computers promise to be millions of
times faster than today's fastest supercomputers, potentially
revolutionizing everything from medical research to the way people solve
problems of climate change. The wait for these machines, though, has
been long, despite the billions poured into them.
But the uncertainty and the dismal stock performance of publicly-listed
quantum computer companies including Rigetti Computing Inc have not
scared investors away. Some are turning to startups who are pivoting to
using powerful chips to run quantum-inspired software on regular
computers as they bide their time.
Lacking quantum computers that customers can use today to get an
advantage over classical computers, these startups are developing a new
breed of software inspired by algorithms used in quantum physics, a
branch of science that studies the fundamental building blocks of
nature.
Once too big for conventional computers, these algorithms are finally
being put to work thanks to today's powerful artificial intelligence
chips, industry executives told Reuters.
QC Ware, a software startup that has raised more than $33 million and
initially focused only on software that could run on quantum computers,
said it needed to change tack and find a solution for clients today
until the future quantum machines arrive.
So QC Ware CEO Matt Johnson said it turned to Nvidia Corp's graphic
processing units (GPU) to "figure out how can we get them something that
is a big step change in performance ... and build a bridge to quantum
processing in the future."
GPUs are microchips that were made to process video for gaming and
became so powerful that they do the bulk of AI computing today. They are
now being used in quantum development, as well.
This week, QC Ware is unveiling a quantum-inspired software platform
called Promethium that will simulate chemical molecules - to see how
they interact with things like protein - on a traditional computer using
GPUs.
The software can cut simulation time from hours to minutes for molecules
of 100 atoms, and months to hours for molecules of up to 2000 atoms,
compared with existing software solutions, said QC Ware's head of
quantum chemistry Robert Parrish.
$1 BILLION RAISED
Big-name investors and funds are backing the future, such as Alphabet
Inc's former chairman Eric Schmidt, asset manager T. Rowe Price, Samsung
Ventures, and the venture arm of U.S. intelligence agencies In-Q-Tel.
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A man takes a photo of a model of the
IBM Q System One quantum computer during the 2020 CES in Las Vegas,
Nevada, U.S. January 7, 2020. REUTERS/Steve Marcus/File Photo
The startups receiving the largesse say they are able to generate
revenue as customers are lining up to be ready for when quantum
computing's "iPhone" moment arrives. That, in turn, is luring
investors.
In the past 18 months, quantum software startups including SandBoxAQ
- an Alphabet spinoff - raised about $1 billion, according to data
firm PitchBook. To be sure, development of this technology is
nascent and these startups must work hard to convince some
prospective clients.
SandBoxAQ CEO Jack Hidary said it was only 24 months ago that AI
chips became powerful enough to simulate hundreds of thousands of
chemical interactions simultaneously.
It developed a quantum-inspired algorithm for biopharma simulation
on Google's AI chip called a Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) that
generates revenue today. SandBoxAQ told Reuters in February it
raised $500 million.
Jason Turner, who founded Entanglement Inc in 2017 to be a "quantum
only lab," became impatient with the slow pace of quantum hardware
development.
"It's been ten years away for what, 40 years now, right?" he said.
He finally relented, turning to Silicon Valley AI chip startup Groq
to help him run a cybersecurity quantum-inspired algorithm.
Ultimately, the software inspired by quantum physics won't perform
well on quantum computers without some changes, said William Hurley,
boss of Austin-based quantum software startup Strangeworks.
Still, he said companies that start using them will have engineers
"learning about quantum and the phenomenon and the process, which
will better prepare them to use quantum computers at the point that
they do so." That moment could arrive suddenly, he said.
Strangeworks, which also operates a cloud with over 60 quantum
computers on it, raised $24 million last month from investors
including IBM.
(Reporting by Jane Lanahee Lee in Oakland, California; Editing by
Peter Henderson, Sayantani Ghosh and Nick Zieminski)
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