Building business partnerships

In artificial intelligence, quantum computing, cybersecurity and computer architecture

Futuristic circuit board and semi conductor

Cambridge is the home of computing in the UK, from Charles Babbage, through Alan Turing, the pioneers of personal computing in the 1980s and the global phenomenon of Arm, to the explosion of artificial intelligence and the emergence of quantum technologies.

Today, AI, cyber security, quantum computing and computer architecture are all areas of intense research and innovation across the University and the wider Cambridge ecosystem.

Are these areas in which your organisation is looking to develop its skills and capabilities? Would you like to join us in some blue-sky, world-changing thinking?

Meet four of our leading researchers from the Department of Computer Science and Technology, find out what they are working on - and why collaborating with industry is key to their success.

Artificial Intelligence

Professor Nic Lane on why we need new collaborative models for artificial intelligence and machine learning - and the benefits of working with industry partners.

Quantum computing

Dr Prakash Murali on designing the systems that will make the application of quantum computing a reality.

Combatting cybercrime

Professor Alice Hutchings on how industry and academia can work together to prevent and disrupt cybercrime.

Computer architecture

Professor Tim Jones on making sure we have the computing resource we need to address our major societal challenges.

Together we can make a difference

"Cambridge has some of the world's smartest people tackling some of the world's most urgent problems.

"But we can't do it alone. We need to work with industry partners to get our ideas out of the lab and into the real world."

Diarmuid O'Brien, Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Innovation

To find out more about how your organisation can work with Cambridge on these or other challenges contact us at: business@admin.cam.ac.uk

Diarmuid O'Brien

The text in this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. 

Published: 18 September 2024

Images
Top: Getty Images: credit: Yuichiro Chino
Diarmuid O'Brien: credit: StillVision