
Today I’m launching a personal project I’ve wanted to ship for a while — quantum comics.
Tomorrow, Sunday, and on future Sundays, I’ll post a new “Quantum Bits” strip featuring my two heroines, Quantessa and Atomique.
As a kid, I was always looking forward to the Sunday comics. Ripping open the newspaper, spreading the colorful pages across the floor — that was the highlight of the week. Peanuts, Garfield, Dennis the Menace, Doonesbury, Spider-Man — I devoured them all.
Years later, I was delighted to take my kids to the Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, California, celebrating the creator of Peanuts. Seeing his original strips up close reminded me how much a simple comic can spark curiosity and joy.
Sunday has been the day for comics since newspapers started printing them in the 1890s. Color printing, bigger pages, families with time to read — Sunday was made for comics. And for me, it was pure magic.
I think quantum computing deserves its own version of that magic.
Quantum can feel intimidating. Superposition, entanglement, error correction — these concepts matter, but they’re often buried in jargon or lost in hype. Quantum Bits is my attempt to change that. Each Sunday strip will take a quantum term or idea and trying to make it accessible, visual, and — I hope — fun.
No PhD required. Just Quantessa, Atomique, and a few laughs along the way.