Pragmatism over hype
To be clear, I’m not dismissing quantum computing entirely. The Majorana 1 chip undoubtedly represents a substantial leap forward in hardware design and computational potential. Innovation in this field has a rightful place in academia, research, and industries that rely on extreme precision and computation: climate modeling, molecular biology, etc. Microsoft, Google, IBM, and others will continue to push boundaries, and that’s good for science and humanity.
But for the average enterprise that spends its days managing cloud costs and dealing with ever-increasing volumes of user data, the promises of quantum computing glitter from a distance but add little tangible value. Cost, operational difficulty, and lack of trained talent in quantum development strip off much of the shine.
When I talk to enterprise leaders, their most common questions revolve around immediate, practical concerns: How can cloud computing lower costs? Which AI models will optimize our supply chain? How can we secure workloads against growing cyberthreats? None of them are asking about subatomic particles or topology-based qubits.