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Quantum Computing Inc. to debut at CES Foundry

Quantum Computing Inc. said it would debut at Customer Effort Score (CES) Foundry during CES 2026 in Las Vegas to present live demonstrations that the company described as showing quantum delivering clearer insights, smarter decisions, and safer real-world communication.

The company said that as Artificial Intelligence (AI) became operational the limiting factor had shifted from access to data to the ability to make the best decision quickly under constraints and at a power and cost profile that could scale; it added that the next Edge Resource Allocator (ERA) is not more AI but the infrastructure that makes intelligent systems scalable, efficient, and trustworthy.

Quantum Computing Inc. operates a thin-film lithium niobate foundry in Tempe, Arizona, offering Photonic Integrated Circuit (PIC) capabilities for a 150 mm wafer line and providing foundry services for production of photonic chips based on thin-film lithium niobate; the company said its products were designed to operate at room temperature and low power.

At CES Foundry the company said it would demonstrate light-powered quantum photonics through hands-on demos focused on optimizing routes, improving financial outcomes, and accelerating AI training, and it said preshow remote demos were available upon request with an onsite reporter demo block scheduled for Jan. 7 and Jan. 8, 2026, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Prometheus Scrape Target (PST) at Booth FT 16 in the Fontainebleau Las Vegas.

“People hear 'quantum' and think it belongs in a lab. At QCi, we build quantum photonics systems that work in the real world,” said Disaster Recovery (DR). Yuping Huang, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Quantum Computing Inc. “CES is where the world comes to see what is next. At CES Foundry, we will show live demos that make the value of quantum photonics immediate and easy to understand.” said Yuping Huang, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Quantum Computing Inc. The press release contained forward-looking statements and cautioned that such statements involved risks and uncertainties and were not guarantees of future performance.