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I was just going to summarize this article, but I kept realizing that I couldn't do a better job than Aaronson did here. So, consider just reading it. Great place to start with quantum computing. Also great read if you plan on asking Aaronson any questions at the (previously unannounced) AMA tomorrow.

I’ve been writing about QC on this blog for a while, and have done hundreds of public lectures and interviews and podcasts on the subject. By now, I can almost always predict where a non-expert’s QC question is going from its first few words, and have a well-rehearsed answer ready to go the moment they stop talking. Yet sometimes I feel like it’s all for naught.

1. The Tyranny of Black and White.1. The Tyranny of Black and White.

Hundreds of times, I’ve answered someone’s request to explain QC, only to have them nod impatiently, then interrupt as soon as they can with: “So basically, the take-home message is that quantum is coming, and it’ll change everything?” Someone else might respond to exactly the same words from me with: “So basically, you’re saying it’s all hype and I shouldn’t take any of it seriously?” As in my wolf allegory, the same person might even jump from one reaction to the other. Seeing this, I’ve become a fervent believer in horseshoe theory, in QC no less than in politics. Which sort of makes sense: if you think QCs are “the magic machines of the future that will revolutionize everything,” and then you learn that they’re not, why wouldn’t you jump to the opposite extreme and conclude you’ve been lied to and it’s all a scam?

2. The Unidimensional Hype-Meter.2. The Unidimensional Hype-Meter.

“So … [long, thoughtful pause] … you’re actually telling me that some of what I hear about QC is real … but some of it is hype? Or—yuk yuk, I bet no one ever told you this one before—it’s a superposition of real and hype?” OK, that’s better. But it’s still trying to project everything down onto a 1-dimensional subspace that loses almost all the information!

3. Words As Seasoning.3. Words As Seasoning.

I often get the sense that a listener is treating all the words of explanation—about amplitudes and interference, Shor versus Grover, physical versus logical qubits, etc.—as seasoning, filler, an annoying tic, a stalling tactic to put off answering the only questions that matter: “is Quantum real or not real? If it’s real, when is it coming? Which companies will own the Quantum space?” In reality, explanations are the entire substance of what I can offer. For my experience has consistently been that, if someone has no interest in learning what QC is, which classes of problems it helps for, etc., then even if I answer their simplistic questions like “which QC companies are good or bad?,” they won’t believe my answers anyway. Or they’ll believe my answers only until the next person comes along and tells them the opposite.

4. Black-Boxing.4. Black-Boxing.

Sometimes these days, I’ll survey the spectacular recent progress in fault-tolerance, 2-qubit gate fidelities, programmable hundred-qubit systems, etc., only to be answered with a sneer: “What’s the biggest number that Shor’s algorithm has factored? Still 15 after all these years? Haha, apparently the emperor has no clothes!” I’ve commented that this is sort of like dismissing the Manhattan Project as hopelessly stalled in 1944, on the ground that so far it hasn’t produced even a tiny nuclear explosion. Or the Apollo program in 1967, on the ground that so far it hasn’t gotten any humans even 10% of the way to the moon. Or GPT in 2020, on the ground that so far it can’t even do elementary-school math. Yes, sometimes emperors are naked—but you can’t tell until you actually look at the emperor! Engage with the specifics of quantum error correction. If there’s a reason why you think it can’t work beyond a certain scale, say so. But don’t fixate on one external benchmark and ignore everything happening under the hood, if the experts are telling you that under the hood is where all the action now is, and your preferred benchmark is only relevant later.

5. Questions with Confused Premises.5. Questions with Confused Premises.

“When is Q-Day?” I confess that this question threw me for a loop the first few times I heard it, because I had no idea what “Q-Day” was. Apparently, it’s the single day when quantum computing becomes powerful enough to break all of cryptography? Or: “What differentiates quantum from binary?” “How will daily life be different once we all have quantum computers in our homes?” Try to minimize the number of presuppositions.

6. Anchoring on Specific Marketing Claims.6. Anchoring on Specific Marketing Claims.

“What do you make of D-Wave’s latest quantum annealing announcement?” “What about IonQ’s claim to recognize handwriting with a QC?” “What about Microsoft’s claim to have built a topological qubit?” These questions can be fine as part of a larger conversation. Again and again, though, someone who doesn’t know the basics will lead with them—with whichever specific, contentious thing they most recently read. Then the entire conversation gets stuck at a deep node within the concept tree, and it can’t progress until we backtrack about five levels.
asking Aaronson any questions at the (previously unannounced) AMA tomorrow.

That would be big... Aaronson for an SN ~AMA...

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It's happening today!

#1477033

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What the actual fuck!

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Sorry for the late notice, but he agreed to do it a bit last minute.

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Damn, this is the kind of ~AMA I would actually be able to interest some non-bitcoin fellow physicists to pop into SN... Will send out some messages/emails.

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Seems like a fairly common frustration that experts have when being asked to engage with laypeople on their topic of expertise.

Laypeople tend to want digestible, simple answers that feel actionable to them in the moment. Unfortunately, the truth is usually nuanced, complex, and the actionability is questionable or uncertain.

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Hence I'm always wary when I read "Experts say that...", followed by a single hard truth, on a news website...

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1 sat \ 2 replies \ @OT 23 Apr

If anyone gets a chance to ask him about the current costs of what these companies are spending on developing a QC that would be interesting.

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You could have that chance: today @ 330 PM Texas time

#1477033

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103 sats \ 0 replies \ @OT 23 Apr

Bed time soon for me soon in +8:00

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It’s a great primer to make sure we’re asking questions that actually engage with the science rather than just asking for stock tips or Q-Day predictions

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