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It’s been a busy few months at Qruise, with the lead-up to the APS Global Physics Summit and lots of new software features and fixes.

Read about our latest updates now:

  • Qruise extends NV centre bring-up through collaboration with Goethe University Frankfurt

  • March release – natural-language interactions with OpenCode

  • APS Global Physics Summit

Qruise extends NV centre bring-up through collaboration with Goethe University Frankfurt

Following our ambition to become completely hardware agnostic, we’ve been working with XeedQ and the Modular Supercomputing and Quantum Computing (MSQC) group at Goethe University Frankfurt to enable reliable operation of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centre quantum systems. As part of this, we’ve demonstrated automated bring-up, simulation, and optimal control of a 5-qubit XeedQ QPU. This significantly reduces the effort required to bring the system into operation.

March release – natural-language interactions with OpenCode

The first flowers are in bloom, and the Qruise team has been busy with a bit of spring cleaning.

Our biggest new feature is the integration of natural-language interactions with QruiseOS via OpenCode and the Qruise Model Context Protocol (MCP). You can now ask your favourite AI assistant questions about your measurements, workflows, and experiment data, and edit workflows directly — for example, by adding new experiments or updating your schema — through the OpenCode chat.

We’ve also added several new QruiseOS dashboard features, including per-qubit run status, full workflow visibility during execution, and enhanced experiment search. As for QruiseML, this release places a strong focus on our Optimiser API and the new EnsembleOptimiser extension, which support standard and robust optimal control across a broad range of full-stack systems consisting of QPUs and control electronics.

APS Global Physics Summit

It’s been two weeks since the APS Global Summit, and what a week it was!

It was great to see the progress over the last year in quantum, as systems scale and performance continues to improve across all platforms.

A clear theme this year was the growing emphasis on quantum error correction and its experimental implementations, signalling a shift from NISQ to fault-tolerant quantum computing. This was also evident in calibration talks, which are moving beyond optimising isolated gate fidelities to multi-gate performance tailored to error correction protocols.

We really enjoyed our time at the booth, with many interesting conversations with colleagues (old & new) from academia and industry. Excited to see you all again in Atlanta!

Didn’t catch us at APS? Book a live demo!

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