<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><ns2:project xmlns:ns1="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api" xmlns:ns2="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api/project" xmlns:ns3="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api/fund" xmlns:ns4="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api/person" xmlns:ns5="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api/project/outcome" xmlns:ns6="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api/organisation" ns1:created="2026-06-22T07:57:45Z" ns1:href="http://gtr.ukri.org/gtr/api/projects/F203CAE3-5045-4C9C-8572-1F3DF438AFED" ns1:id="F203CAE3-5045-4C9C-8572-1F3DF438AFED"><ns1:links><ns1:link ns1:href="http://gtr.ukri.org/gtr/api/persons/1526233B-7B40-45C3-B229-D4230AFA2547" ns1:rel="PM_PER"/><ns1:link ns1:href="http://gtr.ukri.org/gtr/api/organisations/A69FA59F-DA2E-43C7-83B1-967B0612F0E2" ns1:rel="LEAD_ORG"/><ns1:link ns1:href="http://gtr.ukri.org/gtr/api/organisations/A69FA59F-DA2E-43C7-83B1-967B0612F0E2" ns1:rel="PARTICIPANT_ORG"/><ns1:link ns1:end="2026-04-29T23:00:00Z" ns1:href="http://gtr.ukri.org/gtr/api/funds/9C860740-A74E-47CA-B9E6-C0B4FB78A503" ns1:rel="FUND" ns1:start="2025-11-01T00:00:00Z"/></ns1:links><ns2:identifiers><ns2:identifier ns2:type="RCUK">10174047</ns2:identifier></ns2:identifiers><ns2:title>Compact Superconducting Quantum Computer</ns2:title><ns2:status>Closed</ns2:status><ns2:grantCategory>Fast Start Response</ns2:grantCategory><ns2:leadFunder>Innovate UK</ns2:leadFunder><ns2:abstractText>SpinOr's mission is simple: put a quantum computer in every lab. Current superconducting systems demand multi-tonne cryogenic plants and specialist operators; SpinOr aims to compress the stack into a single rack. Our refrigerator's design is no more complex than an air-conditioner, and Python APIs compatible with Qiskit and Cirq let researchers execute circuits on site with zero cloud latency or data-sovereignty risk.

Over six months we will fabricate pilot qubit wafers, publish integration specifications for HPC clusters and sign a transatlantic cohort of beta users. The work ends with a public launch pack that supports a pre-seed raise and first-article manufacturing.

The outcome: export-ready quantum hardware, a trained pipeline of quantum engineers and an uplift for one of the Government's critical technologies.</ns2:abstractText></ns2:project>