Oloromnal Quantum
Oloromnal Quantum Computers (“OQ”) was created in 2044 after it spun off from Agerszijn Computing Research, where it had originally been developing quantum computers. Its main service is cloud quantum computing services and database management. Developers, researchers, and scientists give OQ something to process on their in-house quantum computers, who send back the results on conventional computers. It’s biggest customers are enterprises and governments who have large databases to query, complex simulations to run, or cryptographic keys to break. For example, Saep’ek Metropolitan Authority in K’ahjaan uses OQ technology to administer its Social Credit Score services.
Logo
The logo is OLOROMNAL QUANTUM joined together with its first letter in superposition, which is read differently depending on which word is being read (observed). Panja, the cat in the box, represents the company’s flexibility to use quantum computing for a wide variety of applications. It is unclear whether the mascot is named after the company’s first quantum computer, Panja-1, or if the computer was named after a developer’s cat named Panja. Panja is the same cat depicted on the cover of Quantum Oracle Design, a book about quantum computing by Runa Liszic.
Notable Products
Panja
Panja is OQ’s flagship line of quantum computers. The first model, Panja-1 entered development some time before the company spun off from Agerszijn Computing Research. Originally, Panja-1 was being developed under contract from the Malaszec government for an undisclosed purpose. The 20-qubit quantum computer was eventually released in 2044, the same year the company was created.
oqDB
oqDB was released in 2049 as the first commercially available quantum database, which requires quadratically fewer queries for database searching compared to conventional databases. oqDB supported the familiar Structured Query Language from launch, which made it easy for developers to transition from a conventional database to oqDB. Along with the oqDB software, the company launched a cloud quantum database service called Qloud, which allows clients to use quantum databases without needing a quantum computer to host their own.
Janejal
Janejal is the first quantum oracle and was made public in 2066. Its technology builds on the same quantum computing principles used in oqDB to quickly evaluate the answers of large reading arrays. It is the first practical usage of Rilnev’s algorithm, a previously theoretical approach to oracle equation generation optimized for quantum computation. Reportedly, work had been underway on the design and construction of a quantum oracle since before the OQ’s spinoff from Agerszjin Computing Research. This has led some to believe that this was the original purpose of creating Panja-1.