BTQ builds hardware-level cryptographic security for mission-critical networks, with a stack rooted in FPGA/ASIC design (Verilog, SystemVerilog, C++) and post-quantum algorithms (RSA, AES). The company is actively engineering side-channel mitigation into silicon—both power and electromagnetic attacks—while developing processing-in-memory accelerators and formal verification tooling. The hiring mix (8 engineers, 1 sales role at mid-to-lead level, minimal velocity) and pain-point focus on the "gap between security and semiconductor ecosystem" suggest early-stage infrastructure work rather than mature product sales.
BTQ is a quantum technology company operating in post-quantum cryptography infrastructure, based in Vancouver with 11–50 employees. The product surface spans hardware design (RTL implementations of cryptographic accelerators), verification and simulation tooling, and compiler/driver layers to integrate post-quantum algorithms onto custom silicon. Active project work includes side-channel attack mitigation (power, electromagnetic), processing-in-memory accelerator design, and formal software cryptography tools. The company is hiring engineers in the United States and noted a challenge around transitioning to formal sales processes, indicating early commercialization phase.
BTQ uses Verilog, SystemVerilog, C, C++, and Python for hardware design and software tooling. FPGA and ASIC development are core; cryptographic primitives include RSA and AES. Cocotb is used for testbenching.
BTQ is developing post-quantum cryptographic hardware, including side-channel attack mitigation, processing-in-memory accelerators, RTL implementations, verification tools, and compiler/driver software to map classical and post-quantum algorithms onto custom silicon.
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