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IDC Forecasts Worldwide Quantum Computing Market to Grow to $7.6 Billion in 2027

AleksandarK

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International Data Corporation (IDC) today published its second forecast for the worldwide quantum computing market, projecting customer spend for quantum computing to grow from $1.1 billion in 2022 to $7.6 billion in 2027. This represents a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 48.1%. The forecast includes base quantum computing as a service as well as enabling and adjacent quantum computing as a service.

The new forecast is considerably lower than IDC's previous quantum computing forecast, which was published in 2021. In the interim, customer spend for quantum computing has been negatively impacted by several factors, including: slower than expected advances in quantum hardware development, which have delayed potential return on investment; the emergence of other technologies such as generative AI, which are expected to offer greater near-term value for end users; and an array of macroeconomic factors, such as higher interest and inflation rates and the prospect of an economic recession.




IDC expects the quantum computing market will continue to experience slower growth until a major quantum hardware development that leads to a quantum advantage is announced. Until then, most of the growth will be driven by maturation in quantum computing as a service infrastructure and platforms and the growth of performance intensive computing workloads suitable for quantum technology.

IDC also expects investments in the quantum computing market will grow at a CAGR of 11.5% over the 2023-2027 forecast period, reaching nearly $16.4 billion by the end of 2027. This includes investments made by public and privately funded institutions, internal allocation (R&D spend) from technology and services vendors, and external funding from venture capitalists and private equity firms. Of particular note is the growing interest in quantum computing by global government agencies of which 14 (13 countries plus the European Union) have announced quantum initiatives that span multiple years and will generate billions of dollars for quantum computing research.

The billions of dollars being allocated to the research and development of quantum computing have led to recent advancements in quantum computing hardware and software, as well as new error mitigation and suppression techniques. These advancements fuel speculation that achieving a near-term quantum advantage may be possible using today's noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) systems. Over the long term, these investments are expected to result in the delivery of large-scale quantum systems capable of solving some of the most complex problems that challenge today's scientists and engineers, causing a surge in customer spend towards the end of the forecast period.

IDC sees 2022 as an eventful year in the quantum computing industry. Strategic approaches implemented to reach a near-term quantum advantage using NISQ systems became more defined as vendors published quantum computing road maps emphasizing methods for improving qubit scaling, as well as new techniques for error mitigation and suppression. To improve the accessibility and usability of quantum systems, previously inaccessible quantum modalities became accessible for end-user experimentation, while other quantum hardware vendors announced partnerships for on-premises quantum deployments and quantum software vendors provided frictionless software offerings for nonquantum specialists. Finally, quantum hardware and software vendors announced the anticipated launch of new scientific accelerator platforms that will help with the integration of quantum, AI, and HPC.

"There has been much hype around quantum computing and when quantum computing will be able to deliver a quantum advantage, for which use cases, and when," said Heather West, Ph.D., research manager, research manager within IDC's Enterprise Infrastructure Practice. "Today's quantum computing systems may only be suitable for small-scale experimentation, but advances continue to be made like a drumbeat over time. Organizations should not be deterred from investing in quantum initiatives now to be quantum ready in the future."

The IDC report, IDC's Worldwide Quantum Computing Forecast: 2023-2027: Surfing the Next Wave of Quantum Innovation (IDC #US49198322), provides a worldwide market forecast for a composite view of customer spend for quantum computing (hardware, software, cloud, and other services) for the 2023-2027 period. As part of this forecast, IDC breaks out base quantum computing as a service, and enabling and adjacent quantum computing as a service customer spend. The report also provides a market overview, including trends in quantum computing investments, as well as drivers and challenges for quantum computing vendors and cloud service providers.

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Was the forecast computed by a quantum computer?
 
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Idk what this thing is it makes me mad it is stupid everyone is dumb rawrrr
 
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So far nothing is showing that quantum computing is that special, until then I don't expect any adoption of this.
 
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So far nothing is showing that quantum computing is that special, until then I don't expect any adoption of this.
The fastest quantum computer in the world is IBM's Osprey, which has 433 qubits. Qubits are the basic unit of information in a quantum computer. The more qubits a quantum computer has, the more powerful it is.

The most powerful supercomputer in the world is Frontier, which has 1.1 exaflops of computing power. An exaflop is a quintillion floating-point operations per second.

In terms of raw computing power, Frontier is still much more powerful than Osprey. However, quantum computers are able to solve certain problems that are exponentially more difficult for classical computers. For example, a quantum computer could factor a 1024-bit number in a few hours, while a classical computer would take trillions of years.

So, while Osprey is not yet the most powerful computer in the world, it is still a significant milestone in the development of quantum computing. As quantum computers continue to improve, they have the potential to revolutionize many different fields, such as cryptography, drug discovery, and materials science.
 
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sniff sniff................smells like hmmmm investor cash flow stocks for someone................
 
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So far nothing is showing that quantum computing is that special, until then I don't expect any adoption of this.
An interesting approach. No worries though, as soon as more powerful quantum hardware becomes available many people will do anything and everything they can to get it. Because you are correct, quantum computers are only useful for a rather narrow set of problems. It just so happens that those problems are the foundation of modern cryptography.
 
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