Introduction

Happy New Year! This marks the first blog in the new monthly format. We have switched to this format to allow for these blogs to contain more information, be more meaningful, and to make it easier to follow along with each and every blog.

Since our last entry, the holidays have come and gone, and already there has been news on the Quantum Computing front. IBM and Daimler have announced a partnership to develop new lithium-sulfur batteries using quantum computers, new benchmarks for quantum computers have been developed by researchers at the US Department of Energy, and Intel has developed a new type of hardware chip for quantum computers called Horse Ridge. 2020 has barely begun, and already it is looking like it will be a big year for quantum computing.

Development

Credit: Discord user Smith

qrandomx: Fix - Process all items on eventQueue to avoid deadlock

api.theqrl.org: API Patches (New API)

block-explorer: Use latest explorer-helpers module

explorer-helpers: build(deps): bump handlebars from 4.1.2 to 4.5.3

qrl-cli: feat: Add create-lattice and get-keys functions

qrl-wallet: Fix some UI issues and spend bug

Upcoming Amsterdam Dev Summit

As many of you are aware, the developers for QRL will be meeting in Amsterdam this week to collaborate in person on the most important technical developments for the QRL network. Being able to work in the same place (to say nothing of the same timezone) can be invaluable to the development process. First in line for this particular summit is the upcoming hard fork — what is will contain (more on that below), implementation, optimization, and testing.

Look for more announcements regarding the developer summit and all it has accomplished once it has been completed.

The Hard Fork