Building a quantum computer that delivers measurable utility has become the field’s defining challenge. Erik Hosler, a systems-focused quantum architect with a background in photonic manufacturing, sees this phase as a turning point where the engineering discipline begins to shape what quantum systems can actually do. The first team to achieve practical performance at scale will set the direction for how the technology is applied, deployed, and expanded.
What makes this milestone so important is not raw performance alone. A useful quantum computer solves real-world problems in ways that outperform classical systems in speed, cost, or precision. It delivers results in domains where better answers create tangible value, runs without constant lab oversight, and opens the door to scalable, repeatable deployments. The company that reaches this point will define how quantum computing enters the market and where it goes next.
The Power of a Threshold Moment
Every technology has its tipping point. The first useful airplane wasn’t the one that flew farthest. It was the one that proved air travel could scale. The same will be true for quantum computing. The defining moment won’t come when a chip demonstrates supremacy over an obscure problem. It will come when a system consistently solves meaningful problems with economic value.
This threshold is often called a quantum advantage. But in practical terms, it’s about utility, not novelty. A machine that finds better catalysts, streamlines supply chains, or enhances secure communication doesn’t just prove a theory; it reshapes industry standards.
The first to deliver this will unlock the lion’s share of early value, partnerships, and policy influence.
Why Usefulness Is a Higher Bar Than Performance
Quantum supremacy, as famously claimed by Google in 2019, proved that a quantum system could outperform a classical one on a very narrow problem. But that demonstration offered little practical return. The next great leap is building a quantum machine that can:
- Solve real-world optimization problems
- Enable new types of simulation (especially in chemistry and materials science)
- Integrate with classical systems in enterprise environments
- Delivery results within timelines and budgets that matter
It requires more than a clever algorithm. It demands hardware scale, error correction, and a manufacturing system that can support the build-out of thousands or millions of qubits.
Qubit Count Isn’t the Whole Story
While qubit count is often used as a benchmark, it’s a misleading metric on its own. What really matters is logical qubit fidelity, or how well a system can perform a chain of operations without crashing due to noise.
That’s why leading efforts are now focused on scaling not just qubit numbers but quality. Logical qubits, those corrected for noise, require dozens to thousands of physical qubits to function reliably. It makes the race less about creating a powerful chip and more about building the infrastructure to produce error-tolerant systems at scale.
The tipping point will arrive when enough logical qubits can be used to run programs that outperform classical counterparts on tasks that businesses care about.
Manufacturing as the Differentiator
In this context, manufacturing is not a side concern; it’s the main event. Classical computing succeeded because it could scale, and quantum computing will succeed for the same reason.
And this is where PsiQuantum has staked its claim. The company is pursuing a silicon photonics-based architecture that leverages existing semiconductor foundries for qubit production. This choice isn’t about physics; it’s about readiness.
Erik Hosler notes, “PsiQuantum aims to build a million-qubit system, with manufacturing already underway.” It reframes quantum competition as a race toward industrialization. PsiQuantum isn’t just trying to make a quantum computer. It’s trying to build the first useful one using tools that scale.
The Strategic Advantage of Being First
Being the first to build a useful quantum computer is not just a technical achievement; it confers massive strategic advantages:
- Intellectual leadership: Early movers define standards, attract top talent, and gain first-mover trust from government and enterprise buyers.
- Commercial leverage: Exclusive partnerships with pharmaceutical companies, defense contractors, and logistics giants may form before competitors even reach parity.
- Policy influence: The first usable quantum platform will help shape regulations, export controls, and privacy standards.
These benefits are compound. The ecosystem that grows around the first useful quantum machine will shape the field for years to come.
Risk and Reward in the Scaling Phase
Of course, the stakes are high. Scaling millions of qubits isn’t guaranteed. The challenges include:
- Fabrication consistency: Each chip must meet tight tolerances to avoid cumulative errors.
- Thermal control: Even photonic systems may require cryogenic support for components like detectors.
- System integration: Building out full-stack systems (hardware, control, software, applications) demands cross-disciplinary engineering.
But the payoff is equally massive. The first platform that solves these problems wins not just a customer but also a technology paradigm.
Building an Ecosystem Around Utility
The company that launched the first useful quantum computer won’t operate in isolation. Its success will pull forward:
- Quantum software startups now have a stable target to build toward
- Enterprise pilot programs, seeking early strategic advantages
- Supply chain players, from cooling systems to control electronics
- Research partners are eager to evaluate simulations that were previously out of reach
This ecosystem effect mirrors what happened when classical cloud computing platforms gained maturity. Suddenly, whole industries could adapt, not just the companies building the chips.
The Long Tail of First-Mover Impact
History suggests that first movers in foundational technology often retain long-term advantages:
- Intel’s early lead in microprocessors defined decades of chip architecture
- AWS’s head start in cloud computing still reverberates
- Tesla’s early EV scaling has shaped global battery and infrastructure policy
Quantum computing could follow a similar path. The first team to deliver useful quantum results at scale and cost may enjoy years of lead time, customer loyalty, and market capitalization that others struggle to match.
The Starting Line of the Next Era
Building a useful quantum computer marks the shift from theory to application, from lab science to infrastructure, from promise to impact. The team that crosses that line first won’t just win a race. They’ll establish the ground rules for how quantum computing enters the world.
They’ll decide how it integrates with existing technologies, how it’s deployed, and what problems it tackles first. They’ll show that quantum has gone from being a future concept to being a force, ready to change everything.

