Cuda News Today May 2026
The headline release is , NVIDIA’s platform for hybrid quantum-classical computing. Now directly integrated with standard CUDA workflows, researchers can write kernels that seamlessly dispatch subroutines to quantum processing units (QPUs) while leveraging classical GPU tensor cores for error mitigation and readout processing.
NVIDIA reiterated that the and GPU instruction set architecture remain closed and proprietary. The company also confirmed there are no plans to open‑source the core nvcc compiler front‑end, though LLVM-based backends for NVIDIA GPUs continue to improve. cuda news today
Early benchmarks from the Jülich Supercomputing Centre (Germany) show that a single H100 GPU, combined with a 100+ qubit trapped-ion QPU, simulated a quantum approximate optimization algorithm (QAOA) 8× faster than prior GPU‑only approaches for problem sizes where the quantum hardware is still noisy. The tight coupling reduces latency by over 70% compared to passing data via external hosts. The headline release is , NVIDIA’s platform for
At the GTC 2026 keynote scheduled for next week, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang is expected to demonstrate a live 3,000‑qubit hybrid calculation—likely using a combination of classical GPU emulation and a small physical QPU. The event may also reveal the first CUDA-Q integrations with Microsoft’s Azure Quantum and Amazon Braket. The company also confirmed there are no plans
Santa Clara, CA – April 14, 2026 – NVIDIA’s CUDA ecosystem continues to dominate the parallel computing landscape today, with two significant announcements that underscore its widening moat: a unified programming model linking classical AI with quantum-classical hybrid computing, and a major expansion of its open-source software library portfolio aimed at scientific research.
For today, the message is clear: CUDA is no longer just for GPUs. It’s becoming the lingua franca of accelerated computing—classical, quantum, and everything in between.