About the Author

Hi, I'm Saneel. I'm a technologist with prior experience building companies and early-stage investing, primarily in emerging software industries like crypto and AI. These days, I spend most of my time thinking about frontier computing and their applications to legacy industries. You can find out more about me at: saneel.xyz. To reach out, DM me on X: @sanlsrni.

I've been interested in quantum computing since I stumbled upon some materials on quantum information science during my undergrad at UC Berkeley. In the age of AI and agents, there's no excuse to not be able to get up to speed quickly on intellectual pursuits. I'd be remiss to not mention that I used my own agentic workflow to write and build Superpositioned and finally satiate (in part) a bunch of burning questions I had. I plan on continuing to evolve Superpositioned as the quantum industry develops. I also plan to invest my capital in promising companies in the space (alongside a set of talented friends that are already in some of the players mentioned here). If you're working on something interesting in quantum, please reach out via X.

Atlas Methodology

The Superpositioned atlas combines public ecosystem records with official company pages, university center pages, government and consortium rosters, investor pages, and infrastructure supplier pages. Entries are normalized into a common taxonomy so readers can move across public companies, private companies, universities, government labs, research centers, investors, and enabling infrastructure without switching databases.

Published atlas entries are intentionally concise. The public site serves only the fields needed for browsing: name, type, verticals, status, location when available, summary, and outbound links. More detailed review material stays out of the public frontend.

Records are admitted when there is enough public evidence to support the entity name, broad quantum relevance, category, and at least one useful outbound link. Low-confidence records, source conflicts, duplicate news items, stale links, and image-only destinations are held out or pruned until they can be checked. The goal is coverage without pretending the directory is more precise than the available evidence supports.

News and conference cards link to the underlying public source, not to provenance pages. Items without a usable public outbound source are held out of the public feed until they can be verified.