D-Wave Quantum Inc. is launching its first quantum computing user conference in Japan as demand for annealing quantum technology surges across the Asia Pacific region. The Qubits Japan 2025 event, scheduled for September 17 in Tokyo, comes amid an 83% increase in bookings for D-Wave's quantum computing solutions as organizations develop optimization and quantum AI applications.
Themed "Quantum Realized," the conference will feature presentations from D-Wave executives, customers, and industry thought leaders showcasing how quantum technology is delivering tangible value today. The event will highlight customer success stories, technical roadmap updates, scientific achievements, and advancements in quantum artificial intelligence. Notable speakers include Dr. Alan Baratz, CEO of D-Wave, who will present alongside other experts in the field.
The conference reflects the growing commercial adoption of quantum computing in the APAC region, where organizations are increasingly turning to quantum solutions for complex computational challenges. D-Wave, as the world's first commercial supplier of quantum computers and the only company building both annealing and gate-model quantum systems, positions this event as a demonstration of practical quantum applications already in use.
Registration for the event is available through https://www.eventzilla.net/e/qubits-japan-25-2138656678. The company's quantum computers feature quantum processing units with sub-second response times and can be deployed on-premises or accessed through cloud services with 99.9% availability. More than 100 organizations currently use D-Wave technology, having submitted over 200 million problems to their quantum systems for optimization, artificial intelligence, and research applications.
This user conference represents a significant milestone in the commercialization of quantum computing, particularly in the Asian market where technological adoption has been accelerating. The event serves as both an educational platform and a demonstration of how quantum computing is moving from theoretical research to practical business applications across various industries.


