Japanese researchers have developed a technology that could make quantum computers more efficient and reduce waiting times for users accessing these systems through the internet.
The innovation was created by a team from the Quantum Information and Quantum Biology Center (QIQB) at Osaka University. The new system allows multiple users to access the same quantum computer simultaneously, much like several people travelling on the same bus instead of each needing their own vehicle.

Today, quantum computers are considered one of the world’s most promising technologies. In the future, they are expected to solve extremely complex problems in fields such as medicine, artificial intelligence, logistics, energy, and scientific research.
However, these machines remain rare, expensive, and difficult to operate. For this reason, most users access quantum computers through cloud computing services, using them remotely from anywhere in the world.
Until now, many of these systems allowed only one task to run at a time, even when part of the computer’s capacity remained unused. This resulted in waiting queues and inefficient use of available resources.

The solution developed by the Japanese researchers introduces an automatic quantum multiprogramming mode that intelligently distributes different tasks across the same machine, allowing multiple programs to run in parallel.
According to the project team, this technology reduces wasted computing capacity, improves system efficiency, and could help accelerate the global development of quantum computing.
Written by: Eduardo Quive