Concept

Rigetti Computing

Summary
Rigetti Computing, Inc. is a Berkeley, California-based developer of quantum integrated circuits used for quantum computers. The company also develops a cloud platform called Forest that enables programmers to write quantum algorithms. Rigetti Computing was founded in 2013 by Chad Rigetti, a physicist who previously worked on quantum computers at IBM, and studied under Michel Devoret. The company emerged from startup incubator Y Combinator in 2014 as a so-called "spaceshot" company. The company also went through enterprise revenue-focused The Alchemist Accelerator in 2014. By February 2016, the company had begun testing a three-qubit (quantum bit) chip made using aluminum circuits on a silicon wafer. In March, the company raised Series A funding of US24millioninaroundledbyAndreessenHorowitz.InNovember,thecompanyraisedSeriesBfundingof24 million in a round led by Andreessen Horowitz. In November, the company raised Series B funding of 40 million in a round led by investment firm Vy Capital, along with additional funding from Andreessen Horowitz and other investors. Y Combinator was a smaller investor in both rounds. By Spring of 2017, the company was testing eight-qubit computers, and in June, the company announced the public beta availability of a quantum cloud computing platform called Forest 1.0, which allows developers to write quantum algorithms. In October of 2021, it was announced that the company planned to go public via a SPAC merger, with estimated valuation around 1.5billion.Thisprocesswasexpectedtoraiseanaddition1.5 billion. This process was expected to raise an addition 458 million in funding, in addition to the $200 million raised previously. With this funding, Rigetti planned to scale its systems from 80 qubits to 1,000 qubits by 2024, and to 4,000 by 2026. The SPAC deal closed on 2 March, 2022, and the company shares began trading on the NASDAQ exchange. In December of 2022, Subodh Kulkarni became President and CEO of the company. In July 2023 Rigetti launched a single chip 84qubit quantum processor that can scale to larger systems.
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