The collaboration fast‑tracks Korea’s sovereign quantum capability by creating a skilled workforce and a full‑stack training ecosystem, positioning the country as a regional leader in quantum software development.
South Korea is intensifying its quantum strategy, and education sits at the core of that push. By formalising a partnership between Classiq and SKKU’s QCenter, the nation gains a dedicated conduit for quantum software instruction, complementing the government’s five‑year QCenter mandate. The inaugural public training session, which attracted 50 cross‑sector participants, signals strong demand for practical quantum‑computing skills and establishes a replicable model for future curricula across universities and research institutes.
Classiq’s Qmod language and its EDA‑driven synthesis engine differentiate the platform from traditional gate‑level programming tools. By abstracting algorithmic intent into high‑level models, Qmod enables automatic translation into hardware‑ready circuits, achieving up to 98% reduction in circuit depth while preserving fidelity. Such optimisation is crucial for NISQ devices, where every gate incurs error and cost. The platform’s ability to streamline circuit design lowers entry barriers for engineers and accelerates the transition from theoretical algorithms to experimentally viable implementations.
Strategically, the initiative bolsters Classiq’s expansion across the Asia‑Pacific and deepens Korea’s quantum ecosystem. Integrating Classiq’s software stack with existing hardware collaborations—IBM, IonQ, and AWS—creates a comprehensive training environment that mirrors real‑world deployment pipelines. This full‑stack approach not only cultivates a specialized workforce but also positions Korean firms to adopt quantum solutions faster than regional competitors, driving economic growth and reinforcing national security through sovereign quantum capabilities.
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