Interior
- Phoenix has made a partnership with Origen Quantum to integrate the 72 -piles of quantum segment to the decentralized AI network and an account network, with the aim of making quantum computing easier.
- The partnership depends on the “Wukong” quantum computer, which features 72 Qubits and 126 Qubits prepared, supportive applications in biological sciences, material engineering, AI, and improvement.
- Phoenix develops Quantumvm, which is a web -based computing platform that allows users to run quantitative applications without coding experience, with an expected version in the early Q2 2025.
Press statement – Phoenix, the AI and Depin Compute Network, partnership with Origen Quantum, the leading quantum computing company in China, to give a democratic character to quantum computing through DePin. This partnership will enable Phoenix to take advantage of the highly connected amount of 72 endeavors, and it is only shy in the ability of the recently unveiled Google Willow slide to 105 pile Enabling quantum computing that can be accessed to reduce account costs, complicate publishing, and general expenditures for development.
Cooperation will benefit from the latest computers, a super -connecting quantity in Quantum, “Origin Wukong”, which includes 72 Qubits and 126 Qubits, which includes a total of 198 Qubits. This technology is already programmed, with a variety of industry solutions, both experimental and land that has already been published, including quantum biological sciences, material engineering simulation, quantum learning, improving wallet, smart manufacturing, and energy improvement. The latest limit for quantum account is Quantum AI – whatever experimental or far on the horizon, this may seem, deep nerve networks have already been implemented (repeated gates, and a type of deep learning model) on computers as of 2024 and published in IEEE.
Through this partnership, Phoenix works alongside industry experts to develop Quantumvm (short for the quantum apparent system), which will allow researchers, engineers and developers to build jobs, accounts and applications on the elementary computers of Origein without understanding quantum programming and quantum circuits through the applications programming interface Simplified web service. In addition, the web -based quantitative computing station is appointed to the QUANTUMVM at the top of its development, allowing users to implement accounts and jobs without a required code. It is planned to make quantum computing cheaper, with minimal costs provided, and the lowest technical knowledge required for use, research and implementation.
Phoenix expects the Quantumvm version as soon as possible from Q2 2025. Tiger Lee, President of Phoenix, and quantity said.