qBraid Featured in MIT News
Cambridge, MA — November 4, 2025
We’re proud to share that qBraid was featured in MIT News in a piece highlighting our mission to make quantum computing accessible to everyone — from first-time learners to enterprise teams deploying production applications.
You can read the full article here: Startup provides a nontechnical gateway to coding on quantum computers
From a Dartmouth Classroom to a Global Platform
The MIT News piece traces qBraid’s origins to a frustration that will sound familiar to anyone who has tried to get started in quantum computing: before writing a single line of code, students spent weeks just trying to install software. qBraid CEO Kanav Setia set out to solve that — building a cloud-based environment where the infrastructure is already handled, and users can go from zero to running their first quantum program in under 10 minutes.
That idea got early validation through the MIT Sandbox Innovation Fund and the MIT delta v summer accelerator, two programs that Kanav credits with providing world-class mentorship and the frameworks that shaped qBraid as a company.
20,000+ Developers. 120+ Countries. One Platform.
The article highlights just how far that founding vision has traveled. qBraid has now helped more than 20,000 people across more than 120 countries — from over 400 universities and 100 companies — deploy code on real quantum hardware. A meaningful portion of those users are from developing countries, accessing quantum computing from phones and tablets through qBraid’s lightweight interface.
The platform has grown from a quantum software sandbox into a full ecosystem: qBraid Lab for development, qBook for interactive quantum education, qBraid Gateway for hardware access management, and qBraid OS — the operating system layer now powering infrastructure for four leading quantum hardware companies.
The Operating System for Quantum Computers
One of the most compelling framings in the MIT News piece is Kanav’s description of what qBraid has become: not just a developer tool, but the operating system layer for the quantum industry. As hardware companies focus on pushing the boundaries of qubit counts and fidelity, qBraid handles the software infrastructure that makes those machines usable — productizing quantum computers for the developers, researchers, and enterprises that want to build on top of them.
It’s a vision that maps directly to where the industry is heading: quantum hardware is maturing, and the next wave of adoption will be won or lost at the software and accessibility layer.
Read the Full Story
We’re grateful to MIT News and writer Zach Winn for the thoughtful coverage. If you haven’t read it yet, it’s a great overview of where qBraid came from and where we’re headed.
👉 Read the full MIT News article
Ready to see what qBraid can do for your team? 👉 account.qbraid.com
About qBraid
qBraid is a hardware-agnostic quantum computing platform with over 27,000 developers. With partnerships across IonQ, QuEra, IBM, Rigetti, Atom Computing, AQT, and Microsoft, qBraid brings the full quantum hardware ecosystem together through a single, unified cloud interface. Learn more at qbraid.com.