• @krosfyah4932 · 205 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Friedberg is such a GOAT. I’ve listened to every single All In episode - he was my least favorite when I started and I groaned like Sacks when science corner started - 5 years later he is without a doubt the only one who I hang off of every word. Dude is such a great thinker and so objective. If I were gay, I 100% would, he’s the freaking man.

  • @josephdouglas6260 · 202 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Friedberg is goated for his science conversations.

  • @sawwallace · 150 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Guys dad was a fireman and his mom stayed at home. Underrated parent structure.

  • @urluggage · 98 likes Nov 5, 2025

    I understood 0% but loved 100% of this chat

  • @rc54 · 39 likes Nov 5, 2025

    I love All IN videos when we don't have to deal with the traffic cop...Jcal.

  • @leogir1518 · 31 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Fantastic interview, will share this with a ton of my friends because this is awesome

  • @regmcguire5582 · 28 likes Nov 5, 2025

    These interviews are the best of All In!

  • @TheLoganstewart · 26 likes Nov 5, 2025

    I took quantum with John Martinis at UCSB. One of my favorite professors of all time.

  • @djkoti74 · 22 likes Nov 5, 2025

    What great 50 minutes on YT, it doesn’t get much better than this, thank you @David Friedberg!

  • @Chalup4 · 21 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Studied physics in school, was kinda tough getting a job out the other side but, I regret nothing. How these guys talk to each other is how my buddies and I conversed every single day. Tons of people who are just interested in how the world works and don’t care about much else.

  • @inmortal009 · 19 likes Nov 5, 2025

    YEEEEEES SCIENCE CORNER!!! ❤

  • @justinknash · 15 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Quantum stocks have gone absolutely parabolic and honestly ridiculous. D-Wave Quantum up over 3,600% YTD. Rigetti Computing up over 5,400% YTD. Bubble anyone?

  • @ParthaDeb-q7e · 14 likes Nov 5, 2025

    I remember in my GRE exam having to write an essay about research that does not immediately lead to something practical and tangible. The question was - should such work be funded? It is almost impossible to predict at any time what and when an investment in research that is still scantly understood will produce a payback. That is why research for research sake is definitely not a bad idea.

  • @iceman7i · 12 likes Nov 5, 2025

    THIS IS AWESOME!! thank you David for doing this!!

  • @ramsayfarran992 · 10 likes Dec 5, 2025

    What a great interview. Explained it so well that an 80 year old, with no math, could understand a good 70%. Thank you.

  • @marthajohnson2775 · 7 likes Nov 5, 2025

    This is the third time I've watched this interview. John Martinis is one of the most interesting guests Friedberg has ever had on his podcast. Thank you so much for inviting him, Friedberg. Thank you for accepting, Mr. Martinis!

  • @optimagroup11 · 7 likes Nov 5, 2025

    David, OMG, this was good. Everything I'd heard and read was like a black box... Master Martinis took us all inside the box. Please have him back periodically. You were the perfect person for this interview. Thank you both. SoCalFreddy

  • @robertfoertsch · 6 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Excellent, Deployed Worldwide Through My Deep Learning AI Research Library… Thank You 🙏 ❤

  • @bobrade · 6 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Soo looking forward to hearing!!!

  • @meganlamb2658 · 6 likes Nov 5, 2025

    This guys voice is incredible

  • @khalid424 · 4 likes Nov 5, 2025

    * [00:00] Introduction to John Martinis, the 2025 Nobel Prize winner in Physics. * [00:55] Martinis's background, growing up in San Pedro, and his early interest in science and building things. * [02:05] His experience at UC Berkeley and deciding to work on quantum mechanics in graduate school. * [03:14] The fundamental question posed by Nobel laureate Anthony Leget that inspired his work: "Do macroscopic objects behave quantum mechanically?" * [05:02] A basic explanation of quantum mechanics, describing the "fuzzy" and probabilistic nature of particles at the atomic scale. * [09:11] What is quantum tunneling? (The concept of particles passing through a solid barrier). * [11:12] Discussing the experiment to test quantum mechanics on a larger, macroscopic electrical circuit. * [15:22] The Josephson junction, the key component of the experiment, which involves two superconductors. * [16:21] An explanation of how superconductors work, where electrons condense into a single state and can flow without resistance. * [21:00] The groundbreaking results: By measuring discrete energy frequencies, the experiment proved that a macroscopic object (the circuit) obeyed the laws of quantum mechanics. * [23:09] The reception of the research paper when it was published around 1985. * [24:52] How a talk by famed physicist Richard Feynman inspired Martinis to dedicate his career to quantum computing. * [27:36] Martinis's career path after graduate school, including his work at Google's quantum lab. * [29:55] The 2019 "quantum supremacy" experiment, which used 53 qubits. * [30:33] A simple explanation of what a qubit is and how it relates to his original Josephson junction work. * [33:04] The long-term impact of his Nobel-winning research, which essentially created the field of superconducting quantum computing. * [35:53] The current state of quantum computing and the challenges of noise and errors. * [37:30] Speculation on the timeline for when useful quantum computers will be available. * [38:41] The potential role of AI in accelerating progress in quantum computing. * [40:54] A comparison of quantum computing progress in the US versus China. * [44:04] The story of how he found out he had won the Nobel Prize. * [47:15] Other technology fields he finds exciting, such as using superconducting detectors to find exoplanets.

  • @JumpingCow · 4 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Cal physics grad here - fantastic interview!

  • @Aanenk · 4 likes Nov 5, 2025

    such a good episode!!! im honestly stunned at how much i am learning

  • @jambojack · 4 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Love the science podcasts, hope we get more. Unfortunately I found it hard to follow some of John's answers but having Friedberg step in to clarify helped

  • @HOLO-f7t · 4 likes Nov 5, 2025

    This makes me want to go back to university for a quantum physics program

  • @findjoseph · 3 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Great conversation :) reminds me of the FromFirstPrinciplesPod ! Please collab Friedberg

  • @greggd2891 · 3 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Good Stuff

  • @bradseed66 · 3 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Awesome!

  • @__________5737 · 3 likes Nov 4, 2025

    Great video. No simping for a change is nice in your videos.

  • @teotwawki00 · 2 likes Nov 26, 2025

    Friedberg can hang with all the BIG BOYS in science and technology. He's such an asset to All In. He does the most meaningful and in-depth interviews. Thank you for this one. If it comes down to talking about MONEY or SCIENCE, I'll take science. Science Corner is the best part of the podcast and gets the least attention. I wish they'd start with FRIEDBERG'S segment. He's talking about the future, not just the money spent and made. Fascinating stuff. Thanks again.

  • @taylorle1206 · 2 likes Nov 7, 2025

    the cat can be in an irrevocable state of dying where some of the cat is and some of the cat is not - but it tends more towards either alive or dead at any given moment - so here we have the superposition of the cat - finally we figured out what's up with cats. All joking aside this research is so incredible - it lends right into Penrose:Figgin on consciousness and the wave function.

  • @LukeTrader · 2 likes Nov 5, 2025

    What a delightful episode. Thanks Friedberg and congratulations to John.

  • @dkgong · 2 likes Nov 5, 2025

    Nice to see we have a whole episode devoted to Science Corner.

  • @russmahy · 2 likes Nov 5, 2025

    What a great interview Friedberg. Mr. Martinis is the living stereotype of a great scientist. I loved that he got triggered early by Feynman. He certainly appears to have the same energy and passion for building and discovery. Wonderful job.

  • @rezvaneh.faraji · 2 likes Nov 5, 2025

    He's so pure and charming

  • @KreLe-v8d · 2 likes Nov 5, 2025

    John Matthew Martinis describes himself as of Croatian descent, his mother being from United States and his father being an ethnic Croat from Komiža on the island of Vis near Split, Croatia.

  • @nickmakeitbetter · 2 likes Nov 5, 2025

    What I learnt is that the probability of the interviewer going through a wall is not 0. So it's 0.trilliongazillionzoroes or smaller, but it's not 0 😅

  • @user-iq42 · 1 like Jan 5, 2026

    agree... superbly done in a comfortable conversation, thx

  • @PrinceBlake · 1 like Jan 5, 2026

    Dr. Martinis, congratulations on your recent recognition and on the extraordinary arc of your work. At the 27:00 mark, your mention of Shor’s Fourier transforms immediately brought to mind Green and Schwarz resolving string anomalies with the mirrored 496. That moment of balance has stayed with me for years. I have been developing a regenerative wave geometry I once called Time’s Arrow, now Christ’s Arrow, which proposes that the wave function itself may be an algorithm embedded in the field Richard Feynman described. Not empty space, but a living, fluctuating substrate from which gravity, tunneling, orbit, and even language emerge. My approach has been unconventional. History, linguistics, and cultural artifacts were used as probes alongside physics and math. Surprisingly, they converged. From Euclid’s unresolved fifth postulate, through Einstein’s curved surfaces, to quantum tunneling and macro systems, the same pattern repeats. Orbits, cycles, counting systems, and symbols appear to be echoes of a quantum field origin. When you spoke about Google’s interest in modeling and AI integration, it struck me as fertile ground for overlap. If computation is learning to model reality, then the field itself must be part of the story. I would be honored to explore this intersection with your team, not just to advance quantum computing, but to help frame it within a coherent, human narrative that unites physics, computation, and meaning. Thank you for your work, and for pointing toward what may finally be within reach.

  • @dinamarkovic4263 · 1 like Jan 5, 2026

    Tijekom ovoga mjeseca, prosinca, primit će Te , poštovani John M. Martinis , Nobelovu nagradu za fiziku; za otkrće makroskopskog kvantno - mehaničkog tuneliranja i kvantizaciju energije u električnom sklopu; zajedno dodijeljenu i Johnu Clarkeu i Michaelu Devortu. Čestitam svima trima i posebice Vama gospodine John Martinis, čiji su korijeni hrvatski. 🌹 Hrvatska ima moralnu i intelektualnu obvezu prepoznati svoje korijene u Vašoj osobi, poštovani profesore Martinis te osigurati da mlade generacije shvate kako iz ove zemlje može potjecati doprinos koji mijenja svijet. Nemojmo zaboraviti da je i hrvatsko- američki izumitelj i vizionar Nikola Tesla, rodom iz hrvatskih Smiljana, doprinijeo znanosti elektrotehnike i strojarstva. Hvala Vam profesore, gospodine John M. Martinis zahvalna: dr.sc. Dina Marković

  • @Nilafp · 1 like Dec 5, 2025

    Thank you, Dr. John Martin — and thank you for the podcast! Stories like these truly inspires us to pursue science with full energy and commitment!

  • @danieljamesmcgorry2192 · 1 like Nov 28, 2025

    quantum mechanics is the mathematics and the NATURE of the PIXELS and RENDERING of the SIMULATION we are stuck inside aand how theyre supposed to operate, but nothing is solid nothing is matter, its all energy at the quantum levels

  • @scanman4242 · 1 like Nov 13, 2025

    Surely you're joking, Mr. Friedberg!

  • @LiangLu-c8z · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    Great podcast! Mr. David Friedberg and Mr. John Martinis are awesome! Thank you.

  • @neils8443 · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    I'm enjoying this pivot on the all in podcast. I did stop watching the classic all in for some reason but I am keen for more of this style!

  • @debmclachlin8684 · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    Fascinating! With no Science background, I was enthralled to hear all the descriptions & ideas. Wow.

  • @Mr_incroyable · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    Super helpful to get an idea of the field. Thank you!

  • @Dominickhrndz314 · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    Awesome episode

  • @rich8304 · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    All in is the best podcast to surf the wave of progress on wverything.Thanks.

  • @51224-w · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    great interview, thank you

  • @JustXAshton · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    Wow, good work.🙂

  • @AlphaTaylorBeta · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    Goat

  • @Jeremy-Ai · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    Thank you everyone. We are all in together. Anything else better move aside. Yesterday. Congratulations to all nobel prize winners ❤ Am not smart enough to understand… am responsible to appreciate. Noble has a prize… it just doesn’t have trophy the same higher standards. However Nobel or Noble wise up as if a line is being drawn somewhere amongst us all. It is All in means something else there

  • @Quantum_State_Space · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    I'm interested to know how they defined quantum tunneling to be a different entity than induction, or excitation? Was a displacement of mass measured? How do you know the electrons weren't emitted from across the barrier as a photoelectric effect? thanks

  • @cedricyarish7464 · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    Damn 10 years away

  • @yingfan8813 · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    Like the old way to do things.

  • @danieljamesmcgorry2192 · 1 like Nov 5, 2025

    its because consciousness is quantum by divine design matrices....

  • @darrenstone7308 · 1 like Nov 3, 2025

    2:37- I went to Gerkley for Bradge school

  • @ConversationsWithVania Apr 5, 2026

    John Martinis is really fascinating and insightful, I’m very happy I had the chance to talk with him on my podcast as well, learned a lot from his discussions of quantum computing and other things

  • @CraigTaggart Apr 5, 2026

    great to see you at UCSB

  • @katarinamartinisborcic8456 Feb 5, 2026

    Congratulations...

  • @ryanith2 Jan 6, 2026

    8-10 years and we have public companies in the billions of dollars of valuations.

  • @plamd7698 Jan 5, 2026

    Thank you James and IA team, CTO, Mando and Marty - great info as always 🤘🥳🍀 Merry Xmas 🎄

  • @LoisSharbel Jan 5, 2026

    Love david Freidberg! Thanks for this clear info! Almost understand this magic!

  • @Eth4peace Jan 5, 2026

    Lmao the Schrodinger’s cat explanation went right over everybody’s head unless you heard it 100 times😄

  • @jewelrain1 Jan 5, 2026

    Congratulations to the winner. Well deserved. Science rocks! 🎉 But I still think that scientific research in the future should be conducted in a way that is less cruel to the animals involved. Science has to become more humane.

  • @pokingsmot69 Jan 5, 2026

    What would a gaming quantum computer rig be capable of is what I'm crazy about 😂

  • @jason-fq1tk Dec 26, 2025

    Whoa! Joe Namath for a second career went into Physics?😮 Can he still throw the old football?

  • @karanchanaya2981 Dec 5, 2025

    So Great.. John Martinis .. Congratulations..

  • @ProximaCentauri1821 Dec 5, 2025

    Great interview. A very stimulating conversation. Thank you!

  • @aash2009aash Dec 5, 2025

    what an amazing guy

  • @jainjain1258 Dec 5, 2025

    Thankyou.

  • @BeachMountainSports Dec 5, 2025

    Congratulations to John Martinis! Surprised that our paths never crossed considering I've lived near San Pedro in the Torrance area for my entire life and worked at HP for 18 years and more broadly in the Test & Measurement / Semiconductor industry since I was a teenager. These podcasts are great! I do wish that there were more technical follow-ups, specifically on the nature of the measurement technology associated with qubit structure, modeling, and the latest superposition collapse measurement methodology.

  • @M0RGOTH-BAUGLIR Dec 5, 2025

    I love the idea Friedberg doing his own Episodes. I was asking for this well over a year ago but stopped tacking All In not long after. Is this going to continue? 👏

  • @jainjain1258 Dec 5, 2025

    Great background.

  • @Toan.D.Truong Dec 5, 2025

    If Friedberg does his own podcast, I'll be the very first subscriber.

  • @Silvia-v7f4p Dec 5, 2025

    Congratulations Geo data link ❤

  • @rodralph824 Dec 5, 2025

    He speaks about complex ideas and their scientific applications and uses everyday language and emotions in his explanations. Somebody that would make the great unwashed ( like me) comfortable to sit down and have a beer with.

  • @excellentcomment Dec 5, 2025

    There's not a ghost of a chance I'll understand any of this, but since you're kind enough to put it together, I'm game to absorb as much as I can. I feel like an electron trying to pass through walls.

  • @jimc137 Dec 4, 2025

    Richard Feynman promoted using quantum effects for calculations by proposing that a quantum system could simulate another quantum system. He argued that since nature is quantum, it's incredibly difficult to simulate its complex behavior with classical computers, but a quantum computer could do it efficiently. This idea led to the concept of quantum computation, where the computational power would come from quantum phenomena like superposition and interference.

  • @bcmas7481 Dec 4, 2025

    Low temperature means low energy. People should figure out ways like Tesla to get rid of those GDDR high heat in NVDA toast boards.

  • @ExecutiveZombie Nov 27, 2025

    Is it the temperature or the frequency of the temperature?

  • @tdan89 Nov 26, 2025

    I m too dumb for this conversation :(

  • @ExecutiveZombie Nov 26, 2025

    The “God Particle” makes it through! 😎🧟‍♀️

  • @allmysoni Nov 26, 2025

    When Friedberg tries to explain to the audience, to those who are not noble prize winners in physics, he is constantly interrupted and cut-off.

  • @Renatus_Eruditus Nov 26, 2025

    12:12 that is not Schrödinger's cat. It's Schrödinger's furry😼

  • @neils8443 Nov 26, 2025

    Could I walk through a wall as a microscopic object? Maybe the answer is in eastern mysticism. Were there is theknowledge of Sidhi's. Perhaps altered conciousness / the thought of being able to do something what changes the physical macroscopic objects outcome.

  • @deathlogic1 Nov 25, 2025

    How do you see neuromorphic will fit in for AI?

  • @ExecutiveZombie Nov 25, 2025

    How do humans store energy? Given we have the highest efficiency in capacity?

  • @blubblub5037 Nov 17, 2025

    milarepa pass through wall hoow i need read his teaching

  • @drkarmakid Nov 15, 2025

    None of the other besties will watch this

  • @foxtrotunit1269 Nov 11, 2025

    Anybody else notice mr. Martinis sounds EXACTLY like detective Nick Valentine from Fallout 4 ??? I know this is just a sidetrack, a sidenote, but woah... he sounds exactly like him XDDD

  • @tylerallen5340 Nov 10, 2025

    Electrons are oscillating waves to be exact , if I’m not mistaken they have to use probability with QUANTUM PARTICLES BECAUSE YOUR DEAL With potential now , quantum particles can be waves at same form together to be something . atoms have there own frequency that’s dependent upon the rate the quantum particles are oscillating at

  • @koblongata Nov 5, 2025

    Thank you, Friedberg

  • @hfislwpa Nov 5, 2025

    Great job David, dedicated science corner ❤

  • @chrismccoy190 Nov 5, 2025

    This is fantastic

  • @EinherVoigt Nov 5, 2025

    Thank You Mr Friedberg😊

  • @Warley.Araujo Nov 5, 2025

    Great One Friedberg!!

  • @Helloitsme47-m1x Nov 5, 2025

    Great job david

  • @lorddrake2418 Nov 5, 2025

    what and amazing duo, most enjoyable, Thank you both

  • @nirgosh Nov 5, 2025

    Friedbreg! Great interview man.

  • @rustyhauler6477 Nov 5, 2025

    Cool! I could see this guy happily running a milling machine back in the day. He's a thinker

  • @SeanLynchXY Nov 5, 2025

    Thanks, I needed that.

  • @thekosalchannel9608 Nov 5, 2025

    Thank you Excellent

  • @mathewmcfool Nov 5, 2025

    I thought I knew what a qubit was until this, thank you Mr Genius, that explanation was right on time

  • @outofhisboots Nov 5, 2025

    Science corner let's GO!

  • @ammertos1517 Nov 5, 2025

    great video

  • @tanvirarafat666 Nov 5, 2025

    this is great

  • @bimri Nov 5, 2025

    setting aside a forum for Friedberg to brrrr; was the best investment decision for All-in!

  • @MichaelBExperience Nov 5, 2025

    Finally! Science corner and no politics, really looking fwd to listening to this one!

  • @dinarwali386 Nov 5, 2025

    Wow, you can expect it from Friedberg!

  • @SahraEbm Nov 5, 2025

    Congratulations🌷

  • @BenjaminGatti Nov 5, 2025

    Nobel prize for factoring the number 21 🎉

  • @roderickbraenne Nov 5, 2025

    Nobel CLOWNS AWARD!

  • @dluchin1998 Nov 5, 2025

    Science!!

  • @inboxflux Nov 5, 2025

    Burgerman is back 🙂

  • @coltspackerspurdue Nov 5, 2025

    Seems like "gas to liquid" makes more sense than "gas to solid" for electrons in a superconductor, based on John's explanation of the supercurrent

  • @michaelparker992 Nov 5, 2025

    Two curious men, just shootin the breeze. 😊

  • @DireKnack Nov 5, 2025

    I hope one day quantum mechanics will allow us to pop the perfect bag of popcorn.

  • @BornforGreatness888 Nov 5, 2025

    Good

  • @JanDYouTube Nov 5, 2025

    Friedberg is in a different league than others in A-I-P …. He is so nice and humble not laughing at Chamath when ever dictator tries to look smart … Kudos to Friedberg!!

  • @sjholbert Nov 5, 2025

    35:15 in the essence of his creation.

  • @michaelrivette4381 Nov 4, 2025

    Where's my Nobel Prize, Michael Paul Joseph rivette, I've literally have broken all your physics, mathematics and science and string theory and went beyond, and you guys seem to be taking my Nobel Prize from me.

  • @snowbumspaz Nov 4, 2025

    Yeah electrons basically on one side half phasing through like a ghost and boom it pops out the other end no explosion no drama just pure probability that’s why it’s called tunnelling like it straight through solid matter without even touching it crazy right and your team made that happen with the whole circuits not just electrons. That’s the real mindbender.

  • @dahensta1 Nov 4, 2025

    Marinis and his mentor Clarke are 2 of the 3 winners in Physics nobel prize winners, both from UC Berkeley. Guess where the nobel prize in chemistry for 2025 was awarded...yes, another UC Berkely professor. Go CAL, go Bears!

  • @CandysFavorites Nov 3, 2025

    Absolutely! a really great discussion and explanation about what quantum mechanics is and how it has advanced! Just amazing!

  • @esteban-q9n8x Nov 2, 2025

    Friedberg is a good argument to pay for internet each month

  • @ethansommer2882 Oct 31, 2025

    Would quantum tunneling be possible in an extremely cold environment, like Uranus for example?