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SAS Survey Finds Industry Leaders Intrigued About Quantum AI, But Remain Uncertain About Real-World Uses

SAS Survey Finds Industry Leaders Intrigued About Quantum AI, But Remain Uncertain About Real-World Uses

Curator's Take

This SAS survey captures a pivotal moment in quantum computing's evolution where the field has moved beyond simply asking "how much will this cost?" to the more sophisticated question of "what can we actually do with it?" The shift from cost to uncertainty about applications as the primary adoption barrier suggests organizations are now taking quantum seriously enough to budget for it, but need clearer roadmaps for practical implementation. The emphasis on hybrid classical-quantum approaches is particularly telling, as it reflects the industry's growing recognition that quantum computing's near-term value lies not in replacing classical systems entirely, but in strategically augmenting them for specific computational advantages. This trend toward hybrid solutions could accelerate real-world quantum adoption by providing organizations with tangible stepping stones rather than requiring them to make an all-or-nothing quantum leap.

— Mark Eatherly

Summary

Insider Brief SAS reports that interest in quantum AI remains high, but uncertainty about real-world applications has overtaken cost as the top barrier to adoption, even as the company positions new tools to lower entry hurdles. Organizations are beginning to test quantum computing’s near-term value through hybrid approaches that combine classical and quantum systems, according […]