March 6, 2026
10 years of Quantum Games
And playtime isn't over....
I’ve been referring to Dr. James Wootton as “The Dungeon Master of Quantum Computing” for almost as long as he’s been writing these histories of quantum games. Almost. I played with the citizen science puzzle games he refers to anyway. This link does not seem to require a Medium account.
This week’s premium content:
In this edition:
- General Zod escaped from the Phantom Zone!
- Quantum gates are DeLoreans.
- Hippocratic Quantum
- IBM’s “Circuit Breaker”
- Bring an appetite.
- Computer Science courses with video lectures
- #81: I need a lawyer.
- Excuse me, it’s upside-down.
General Zod escaped from the Phantom Zone!
Congratulating Jack Woehr on his 6th year as an IBM Champion would normally be worthy of a private message, but a private message is insufficient if you’re going to invoke the Superman franchise. For the record, Terence Stamp is The Quantum Dragon’s General Zod. This link may require a LinkedIn account.
Quantum gates are DeLoreans.
SaxonQ has a “Back to the Future” analogy for quantum gates. I personally would’ve used the original movie instead of one of the sequels, but I never thought up this analogy, so kudos to whoever did. Someone needs to convince them to get a booth at IQT Nordics and park a DeLorean there. This link may require a LinkedIn account.
Hippocratic Quantum
Mauritz Kop wrote about the intersection of quantum technologies and biomedical ethics for Harvard Law School’s The Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics. The extension of the Hippocratic Oath to quantum technologies is impressive.
IBM’s “Circuit Breaker”
IBM Research could not have picked a more perplexing name for its LinkedIn newsletter. I personally migrated away from Qiskit due to its legendary #breakingchanges. This edition promotes “advantage trackers,” which is IBM disingenuously tracking its own claims. This link may require a LinkedIn account.

Bring an appetite.
There’s one conference for which you want to bring more than your love of quantum. You also want to bring your love of food.
Computer Science courses with video lectures
This GitHub repository includes a long, long list of learning resources, and they’re supposedly all free. The few I clicked on were indeed free. Included in the list are over 2 dozen links classified as “quantum computing.” Familiar surnames include Preskill, Vazirani, Nielsen, and others.
#81: I need a lawyer.
I asked Mr. Stimers about the consequences of hype, how the government polices attempts to circumvent export controls and immigration restrictions, the potential for quantum navigation sensors to become mandatory, the current role of diversity in subcontracting, the convergences of quantum and AI and space, and the legalities of selling US quantum companies to overseas buyers.
This was a great test of the flexibility and extensibility of Juice.
Excuse me, it’s upside-down.
The Quantum Delta NL-funded Quper project now has a compact, fast-turnaround “mini-fridge” cryostat prototype from Leiden Cryogenics running OrangeQS Juice cryogenic control software, and it is intentionally inverted for ergonomic tabletop access. Shrunken components also eliminate the need for liquid nitrogen.
March 3, 2026
IQT The Quantum Dragon Podcast Episode 81 – I need a lawyer.
I asked Mr. Stimers about the consequences of hype, how the government polices attempts to circumvent export controls and immigration restrictions, the potential for quantum...
February 27, 2026
What does THAT mean?
Yuval Boger introduced The Quantum Dragon to Quantessa and Atomique, who will take time out of their busy imaginary schedules each Sunday to explain to him—and you—some quantum...
February 20, 2026
Prof. John Preskill has 200,000 followers.
Prof. John Preskill announced that he has passed 200,000 followers on Twitter, an increase from 150,000 less than 6 months ago. Beyond the personal significance for him, I invite...
February 17, 2026
IQT The Quantum Dragon Podcast Episode 80 – Certified Unpredictability
Dr. Walborn and I spoke about the use cases of quantum random number generators (QRNG), self-testing and certification, the underlying mechanism for guaranteeing randomness, API...
February 13, 2026
Iteration 2: Quantum + 3D Printing
In last week’s “Quantum + 3D Printing,” I noted that the University of Nottingham is using 3D printing with quantum sensors. In response, Classiq’s VP Corporate...
February 6, 2026
Quantum + 3D Printing
I toured a nearby 3D printing facility and wondered what applications there might be in quantum. I had no idea. But it turns out that the University of Nottingham is using 3D...
February 3, 2026
IQT The Quantum Dragon Podcast Episode 79 – A Quantum Computer as a Sewing Machine
Quantum Source popped up on my radar, and I noticed the company is doing things a little differently. It’s using two modalities instead of one. It’s using 3D measurement-based...
January 30, 2026
“If your math is rusty…
Kiran Kaur Raina posted that “if your math is rusty → strengthens it.” The Quantum Dragon read only the first part of that before flying to nearby universities with cans of...














