Quantum computing will be significant game-changer for just about every industry, creating a potential $100 billion market opportunity over the next decade. In fact, its why investors have been jumping into related stocks, such as SuperQ Quantum Computing Inc. (CSE: QBTQ) (OTCQB: QBTQF), Nvidia (NASAQ: NVDA), IBM (NYSE: IBM), D-Wave Systems (NYSE: QBTS), and Quantum Computing (NASDAQ: QUBT).
It would also explain why companies like IBM plan to invest $150 billion in the U.S. over the next five years to boost quantum computing. It would explain why Nvidia has invested bllions of dollars in quantum computing startups. Even other major tech giants like Alphabet and Microsoft are actively investing billions of dollars to develop quantum computing abilities.
After all, with quantum computing, the world may be able to solve problems far too complex for typical computers within minutes, or even seconds. It could even be used to discover new drugs, quicker than even imagined. It may even be able to help advance artificial intelligence, machine learning, financial modeling, cybersecurity, and batteries, to name a few.
Quantum computing is a huge leap forward because “complex problems that currently take the most powerful supercomputer several years could potentially be solved in seconds,” said Charlie Campbell for Time. This could open “hitherto unfathomable frontiers in mathematics and science, helping to solve existential challenges like climate change and food security.”
Look at SuperQ Quantum Computing Inc. (CSE: QBTQ) (OTCQB: QBTQF), For Example.
SuperQ Quantum Computing Inc. just announced that Chief Operating Officer, Krishna Ganesh, and Head of Professional Services, Eyren Uggenti, opened the 11th annual edition of the University of Waterloo’s Nanotechnology Conference on November 1st, 2025. This year’s theme was Quantum Meets Nano: NanoQuantum Science & Technology.
SuperQ also sponsored the event and announced hiring for multiple roles related to quantum hardware and software development. This further strengthens the Company’s collaboration with the world-renowned Waterloo quantum ecosystem and underscores its expansion into quantum hardware research and development as outlined in its recent news releases.
Deepening Ties with Waterloo’s Quantum and Nanotechnology Community
At the University of Waterloo - home to world-leading quantum and nanotechnology labs and programs - SuperQ’s leadership addressed students, researchers, policymakers and industry partners during the opening of WNC. The Company’s role as Platinum Sponsor reflects SuperQ’s commitment to accelerating real-world quantum impact by pairing its Super™ platform with a growing hardware R&D footprint centered on superconducting devices and quantum sensing.
This engagement follows SuperQ’s participation at the University of Waterloo’s Institute for Quantum Computing during FABrIC’s “Build Your Own Superconducting Quantum Device” event, where the Company continued advancing its hardware and sensing initiatives alongside national semiconductor and quantum innovation partners.
“Waterloo sits at the intersection of quantum and nano innovation,” said Krishna Ganesh, COO of SuperQ Quantum. “It’s an honour to be opening this year’s conference. We’re affirming our commitment to the region’s talent and research leadership while accelerating SuperQ’s push into hardware co‑design with our Super™ platform.”
Alignment with NVIDIA’s NVQLink Launch
The last week also brought validation for SuperQ Quantum's hybrid quantum-classical approach to AI and optimization. NVIDIA, with its launch of NVQLink at NVIDIA GTC DC (October 27-29, 2025), is combining classical supercomputing with quantum computing at the hardware level, which is something SuperQ’s Super™ platform has been enabling at the software level.
NVIDIA CEO, Jensen Huang, devoted his keynote on October 28th almost entirely to hybrid classical-quantum computing. The same sentiment was echoed by the participants in the "Quantum, AI and High-performance Computing: Intersection Opportunities" meetup that SuperQ’s CEO, Dr. Muhammad Khan, organized at the GTC DC.
“In order to extract real-world value from quantum computers, they must be combined with classical GPU-based high-performance computing,” commented Dr. Khan. “Classical supercomputing is needed for control, error-correction and denoising of qubits as well as to run components of the solution. Quantum computing should be carefully used as a subroutine in algorithms to solve complex computational problems. Super™ platform enables this in natural language.”
Hiring Momentum: Recruiting Next-Generation Quantum Talent
As part of the Waterloo NanoQuantum Conference, SuperQ highlighted multiple career opportunities for graduates and experienced applicants across quantum software, hardware, and hybrid quantum‑classical systems engineering. Potential roles include, but are not limited to: quantum hardware engineers (superconducting devices, readout/measurement, control), HPC and systems engineers (GPU/accelerators, orchestration, devops for hybrid workloads), AI and mathematical optimization engineers (optimization, AI, hybrid workflows). Details will appear on the Company’s website and social media in the coming days. Interested candidates are encouraged to reach out via the contact details on the Company's website.
“Our work with the Waterloo and other similar ecosystems advances our long‑term strategy: hardware‑software co‑design, commercialization through our Super™ platform, and a robust talent pipeline to build, test and deploy solutions at scale,” added Eyren Uggenti, Head of Professional Services at SuperQ Quantum. “We are hoping to recruit exceptional students and researchers eager to work on practical, scaled deployments - from hybrid quantum workflows to quantum hardware that can make a difference in autonomy, AI, logistics, healthcare and industrial optimization.”
About the Waterloo NanoQuantum Conference
Hosted at the University of Waterloo, the Waterloo Nanotechnology Conference is an annual forum at the frontier of nanotechnology and quantum science, bringing together students, academics, and industry to showcase research and explore commercialization pathways. This year’s conference particularly focussed on the intersection between quantum and nanotechnology.
Other related developments from around the markets include:
Nvidia announced that it is working with South Korea to expand the nation’s AI infrastructure with over a quarter-million NVIDIA GPUs across its sovereign clouds and AI factories. Built with public- and private-sector deployments, the infrastructure forms the foundation for AI-enabled economic growth and innovation across Korea’s industries, including automotive, manufacturing and telecommunications. “Korea’s leadership in technology and manufacturing positions it at the heart of the AI industrial revolution — where accelerated computing infrastructure becomes as vital as power grids and broadband,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Just as Korea’s physical factories have inspired the world with sophisticated ships, cars, chips and electronics, the nation can now produce intelligence as a new export that will drive global transformation.”
IBM announced it has been selected for Stage B, the second of three stages of the Quantum Benchmarking Initiative led by DARPA, the United States Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. As the independent research and development arm of the U.S. Department of Defense, DARPA’s work focuses on identifying, creating, and supporting transformational, high-reward technologies for national security. In 2024, DARPA launched the Quantum Benchmarking Initiative (QBI) to determine the feasibility of building an industrially fault-tolerant quantum computer whose computational value exceeds its cost. The program is designed to rigorously validate and verify multiple approaches towards delivering such a quantum computer by 2033. “IBM’s progression to Stage B of DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative is a firm validation of IBM’s approach to delivering a large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer,” said Jay Gambetta, Director of IBM Research. “IBM has publicly laid out our comprehensive plan and roadmap to scale quantum computers towards fault-tolerance. As the industry advances, we look forward to working with DARPA as they continue an unbiased review of potential viable strategies across the field.”
D-Wave Systems a leader in quantum computing systems, software, and services, and Davidson Technologies, Inc., a mission-driven technology company supporting U.S. Department of Defense and aerospace customers, announced today that D-Wave’s Advantage2TM quantum computer is now operational at Davidson’s headquarters in Huntsville, Alabama. The system is expected to address mission-critical U.S. government problems, particularly in national defense, and will eventually run sensitive applications. This launch marks a major milestone in a multi-year agreement and technology collaboration between D-Wave and Davidson to accelerate quantum computing adoption and deployment among U.S. government agencies. D-Wave and Davidson are already exploring quantum use cases in areas such as radar detection, resource deployment, military logistics optimization, materials science, AI and national security.
Quantum Computing Inc., an innovative, integrated photonics and quantum optics technology company, today announced that the Company will host a conference call and webcast on Friday, November 14, 2025 at 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time to review the Company's operational progress for the third quarter ended September 30, 2025. The Company will release its third quarter 2025 financial results that day after the market closes. To access the live webcast of the conference call, visit the QCi Investor Relations page.
Legal Disclaimer / Except for the historical information presented herein, matters discussed in this article contains forward-looking statements that are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such statements. Winning Media is not registered with any financial or securities regulatory authority and does not provide nor claims to provide investment advice or recommendations to readers of this release. For making specific investment decisions, readers should seek their own advice. Winning Media is only compensated for its services in the form of cash-based compensation. Pursuant to an agreement Winning Media has been paid three thousand five hundred dollars for advertising and marketing services for SuperQ Quantum Computing Inc. by SuperQ Quantum Computing Inc. We own ZERO shares of SuperQ Quantum Computing Inc. Please click here for full disclaimer.
Contact Information:
Ty Hoffer
Winning Media
281.804.7972
[email protected]