How BlueQubit is Making Quantum Computing Real (and Accessible)

Founded by Hayk Tepanyan and his team, BlueQubit was built on a simple idea: make quantum computing accessible to every developer and researcher, not just the physicists in the lab.

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How BlueQubit is Making Quantum Computing Real (and Accessible)  

Quantum computing used to feel like science fiction. Now it’s becoming real — and BlueQubit is one of the teams making that happen.

Founded by Hayk Tepanyan and his team, BlueQubit was built on a simple idea: make quantum computing accessible to every developer and researcher, not just the physicists in the lab.

They saw a problem — quantum tools were either too academic or too complex for practical use. So they decided to fix it.

“We wanted to simplify the developer experience,” Hayk explained. “Quantum computing has so much potential, but the tools weren’t there to let people experiment and learn easily. That’s what we built BlueQubit for.”

A New Kind of Quantum Developer Experience

BlueQubit reimagines what it means to work with quantum computing. Instead of complex complicated tools or academic software, it offers a single environment where users can simulate, run, and visualize quantum jobs. All in one place.

Developers can model quantum circuits, test algorithms, and see results instantly without needing to understand the deep physics underneath.

For researchers, that means rapid experimentation. For startups, it’s a chance to prototype without expensive infrastructure. For enterprises, it’s the ability to integrate quantum workloads into real projects today.

Built on Microsoft Azure

From the start, BlueQubit chose Microsoft Azure as the foundation for their platform. Quantum computing demands serious power, and Azure’s flexibility made it possible to combine simulations with real quantum hardware.

“Most of the jobs today still run as simulations,” Hayk shared. “Azure gives us the compute flexibility to run thousands of jobs in parallel — on GPUs, on clusters — and the infrastructure is always reliable.”

Using Azure allowed the BlueQubit team to build faster, scale globally, and give their users real-time access to both simulated and hardware-backed quantum experiments.

And with support from Microsoft for Startups Founders Hub, they gained not just compute power but also guidance, credits, and technical support that helped bring their platform to market.

Going to Market with WeTransact

When it came time to make BlueQubit’s solution available to enterprise customers, the team wanted to meet developers where they already were — inside the Microsoft ecosystem.

That’s when they teamed up with WeTransact, who helped them launch their solution on the Azure Marketplace.

“The onboarding was simple,” Hayk said. “WeTransact handled the process end to end — we were live in no time. Now, customers can discover, test, and buy our platform directly through Azure Marketplace.”

For a startup scaling in a deep-tech field like quantum computing, that visibility means everything.

What’s Next

BlueQubit isn’t slowing down. Their mission is still the same — to help developers and researchers unlock the power of quantum computing without barriers.

As Hayk summed it up : “Quantum computing shouldn’t be exclusive. The more people who can build with it, the faster we all move forward.”

They’re already expanding their platform, giving users even more tools for education, collaboration, and research.

With Azure powering the backend and Marketplace connecting them to customers worldwide, BlueQubit is proving that quantum computing isn’t just the future — it’s happening now. And everyone should have access to it.

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