The Cost of High School Science Club and Its Management Method

May 6, 2020

I read in Forbes, the capitalist tool, “Google’s Top Quantum Scientist Explains In Detail Why He Resigned.” The write up is an interview with a a high profile expert in quantum computing. His name? Dr. John Marinis. The interview contains a number of interesting factoids plus some PR, but that’s the norm today.

DarkCyber noted this statement by the former Googler:

I think it was hard on people in the group to focus on quantum supremacy because it meant they couldn’t work on other things they wanted to do, and most importantly, we could fail. And it seems tension comes with focus.

I use the phrase “high school science club management method” to describe how a group of young men and women who are usually exceptional in math and science behave in a club formed and run by themselves. There may be an adviser, but that person is in my experience a former member of a high school science club.

The club is insular, operates with considerable freedom because other people are “stupid,” “don’t get it,” or are “wasting time on silly things.”

Google has become one of the foremost proponents of the HSSCMM, and the efforts of the Google CFO attest to the difficulty of reigning in the spending in a science club management environment.

Observations:

  1. The quote from the quantum expert underscores Google’s inability to tolerate focus.
  2. IBM (a content marketing fog machine) and Google found themselves squabbling about quantum supremacy.
  3. The HSSCMM essentially forced a focused and talented wizard to quit.

Net net: Google’s management method generates revenue but if the cost is a loss of talented specialists, what’s that say about the efficacy of the high school approach?

Stephen E Arnold, May 6, 2020

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