In a blog post, Dell Technologies CTO John Roese outlined the emulation platform, which used Dell EMC PowerEdge R740xd and IBM’s Qiskit Runtime, an open-source container service for quantum computers. 

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With technology teams exploring quantum computing for operations in the future, Roese said simulators and emulators will be needed. Dell Technologies is betting that the quantum computer won’t replace all classical computing. Both quantum and classical compute will be accessed via the cloud most likely, he added. For developers, the win is being able to use the Dell-IBM emulation platform to test applications, algorithms and other use cases. Details of the Dell Technologies’ hybrid emulation platform are posted on Github.  Key points include:

The hybrid emulation platform executes on both classical and quantum processing on cloud native platforms like Kubernetes. Previously, developers had to submit data and workloads for processing via the cloud. Each quantum circuit no longer needs to be executed and wait in queue separately. Workloads can be run on-premises. The hybrid approach may save money by giving developers choices to optimize for costs.

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