Qruise has partnered with Goethe University Frankfurt's Modular Supercomputing and Quantum Computing group and XeedQ to automate the calibration and control of nitrogen-vacancy center quantum systems, leveraging its QruiseOS software. This collaboration has resulted in the successful automated "bring-up" of the XQ1, a 5-qubit portable quantum processing unit. The XQ1, also known as "Baby Diamond", is a significant development in the field of quantum computing. By automating the calibration process, Qruise and its partners aim to simplify the deployment of NV center-based quantum systems1. The automated bring-up of the XQ1 demonstrates the potential for streamlined quantum system development, which could accelerate the adoption of quantum technology. This development matters to practitioners because it has significant implications for the future of computation and cryptography, potentially rendering current security protocols obsolete, so what this means is that experts must reassess their assumptions about the security of sensitive data.