QpiAI released its Quantum SDK as open-source software on Wednesday to accelerate the development of quantum software globally [1, 2].

This move lowers the barrier to entry for developers and researchers by providing an accessible framework to build quantum applications. By open-sourcing the kit, the company aims to foster a more collaborative ecosystem for quantum computing, a field currently characterized by high costs and specialized hardware requirements.

The announcement came from Bengaluru, Karnataka, where QpiAI operates as a full-stack quantum computing company [1, 3]. The company said the release provides developers, researchers, and startups with an accessible toolset to advance the industry [2].

Full-stack quantum computing involves managing everything from the physical hardware and qubits to the high-level software layers that users interact with. By providing the SDK openly, QpiAI allows external parties to experiment with these layers without needing to build the foundational infrastructure from scratch [1, 2].

“QpiAI, a globally leading full-stack quantum computing company, today released the QpiAI Quantum SDK as open-source software,” Business Wire India said [1].

The release is intended to bridge the gap between theoretical quantum physics and practical software implementation. This allows startups to prototype quantum algorithms more efficiently, potentially speeding up the timeline for commercial quantum viability [1, 2].

QpiAI released its Quantum SDK as open-source software on Wednesday to accelerate the development of quantum software globally.

The transition to an open-source model for quantum SDKs suggests a shift in the industry from proprietary, closed-door research toward a community-driven development cycle. By democratizing access to the tools required to write quantum code, QpiAI is positioning itself as a central infrastructure provider, potentially accelerating the discovery of practical use cases in cryptography, material science, and drug discovery.