12 Events That Changed The Course of Quantum Information Science
By James Dargan in The Quantum InsiderMIT Endicott House was recently featured in The Quantum Insider, which highlighted the 1981 Physics of Computation Conference at the estate as one of a dozen pivotal moments that shaped the trajectory of quantum information science. The article notes how that gathering, alongside milestones like the development of Shor’s algorithm and demonstrations of quantum supremacy, helped move quantum ideas from theory to experiment and set the stage for today’s rapidly growing quantum technologies and industry ecosystem. Read an excerpt of the article below:
For many people, the story of quantum computing (QC) and quantum information science (QIS) really began way back in 1927 at the Solvay Conference, in Belgium. Formally the fifth conference ever organized, the topic of agenda was on ‘Electrons and Photons’. All the biggest names in physics then — as well as now — were in attendance: Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, Werner Heisenberg, Paul Dirac, and Erwin Schrödinger, and the photo taken of the event has been dubbed ‘the most intelligent picture ever taken’.
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