The next encryption you ship
must outlive Q-day.
NTGFUNGDU is a quantum computing and post-quantum cryptography research firm. We help enterprises capture quantum advantage today and secure their systems against the cryptographically relevant quantum computer of tomorrow.
Quantum-classical research, production migration.
Two complementary practices: applied quantum algorithm research, and the crypto-agility programs your CISO needs before harvest-now-decrypt-later becomes harvest-now-decrypt-tomorrow.
Quantum Advantage R&D
Hybrid quantum-classical algorithms for optimization, simulation, and machine learning. Co-developed with your scientists, benchmarked against the best classical baselines.
PQC Migration
Crypto-agility assessment, algorithm selection (ML-KEM/ML-DSA), and migration program for TLS, code-signing, VPN, PKI, and key-management infrastructure.
Quantum-Safe Architecture
Crypto-bill-of-materials, hybrid PQC + classical schemes, and re-architectured key hierarchies. Designed for graceful algorithm rotation.
Quantum Sensing & Networking
Applied research on quantum key distribution (QKD), entanglement-based timing, and quantum sensing for navigation and metrology.
Algorithm Co-Design
Domain-specific problem encoding for chemistry, materials, finance, and logistics. We work with your domain experts, not around them.
Quantum Education
Executive briefings, working-team workshops, and one-year residency programs for enterprise R&D groups standing up quantum capability.
Q-day is a deadline you cannot push.
Adversaries are already harvesting encrypted traffic to decrypt the moment a cryptographically relevant quantum computer arrives. PQC migration is not a 2030 problem — it is a today problem for any data with a confidentiality lifetime over 5 years.
- NIST FIPS 203/204/205 standards are final — the migration window is open
- Most enterprises do not have a current inventory of their cryptography
- Code-signing chains may take 24+ months to rotate safely
- Hybrid schemes let you ship today without betting on a single algorithm