The Hybrid Quantum-Classical Stack
NVQLink, CUDA-Q and the new architecture of useful quantum computing

Report overview
For more than a decade the dominant narrative in quantum computing has been the race for qubits: more qubits, better gate fidelity, higher quantum volume, and the gradual approach toward an instrument capable of outperforming classical machines on commercially relevant problems. That narrative is now being quietly displaced. Between October 2025 and June 2026, NVIDIA’s launch of NVQLink as an open platform architecture, the release of cudaq-realtime within CUDA-Q 0.14, the first real-time demonstration of a scalable qLDPC decoder on Quantinuum’s Helios processor, and the announcement of an HPE-built GB200 NVL72 testbed at Oak Ridge have shifted the relevant unit of analysis. It is no longer the quantum processing unit considered in isolation, but the full runtime environment in which the QPU is controlled, corrected, calibrated, scheduled and programmed alongside graphics processing units and high-performance computing infrastructure. The architectural transition matters because it changes how quantum capability will be built, financed, governed and ultimately priced — and because the consequences have not yet been integrated into the equity stories of pure-play quantum companies, the procurement strategies of supercomputing centres, or the export-control framework that already governs advanced semiconductors.
Inside the report
Report structure
The report develops the question through 11 analytical sections, moving from the underlying technological or policy problem to its industrial, financial and strategic consequences.
- 01The architectural shift from QPU to logical QPU
- 02NVQLink as platform architecture
- 03CUDA-Q as the programming and orchestration layer
- 04Quantum error correction as the engineering driver
- 05The Quantinuum Helios demonstration
- 06Institutional testbeds at ORNL and across European HPC
- 07Three competing platform models
- 08Consequences for pure-play quantum companies
- 09The strategic question: who governs the stack
- 10What to monitor next
- 11Sources used
Professional value
What the analysis provides
Decision-ready framing
A precise account of the central question, the relevant thresholds and what materially changes for investors, companies and public institutions.
Industrial structure
Analysis of the companies, capabilities, bottlenecks, infrastructure and supply-chain dependencies shaping the field.
Capital and policy context
Interpretation of public programmes, private investment, procurement signals and market positioning around the report’s subject.
Strategic implications
An assessment of risk, competitive advantage, sovereignty, commercial maturity and the signals that should be monitored next.
Research method
Source-led professional intelligence
QFM reports are built from primary and high-authority material including company filings, earnings releases, investor documentation, public-funding decisions, government strategies, regulatory initiatives, technical roadmaps, research institutions and standard-setting bodies. The purpose is to distinguish verified industrial progress from promotional narrative and to connect technology, capital and policy in one analytical frame.
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