Scott Aaronson

Aaronson grew up in the United States, though he spent a year in Asia when his father—a science writer turned public-relations executive—was posted to Hong Kong.[3] He enrolled in a school there that permitted him to skip ahead several years in math, but upon returning to the US, he found his education restrictive, getting bad grades and having run-ins with teachers.[12] In the interview to Scientific American he answers why his blog is called shtetl-optimized, and about his preoccupation to the past: Shtetls were Jewish villages in pre-Holocaust Eastern Europe.An article of Aaronson's, "The Limits of Quantum Computers", was published in Scientific American,[18] and he was a guest speaker at the 2007 Foundational Questions in Science Institute conference.[19] Aaronson is frequently cited in the non-academic press, such as Science News,[20] The Age,[21] ZDNet,[22] Slashdot,[23] New Scientist,[24] The New York Times,[25] and Forbes magazine.
PhiladelphiaPennsylvaniaUnited StatesAmericanCornell UniversityUniversity of California, BerkeleyQuantum Turing machine with postselectionAlgebrizationBoson samplingDana MoshkovitzAlan T. Waterman AwardPECASETomassoni–Chisesi PrizeACM Prize in ComputingComputational complexity theoryquantum computingUniversity of Texas at AustinMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyInstitute for Advanced StudyUniversity of WaterlooDoctoral advisorUmesh Vaziranitheoretical computer scientistscience writerHong Konggifted educationClarkson Universitycomputer scienceTelluride Housecalculuscomputer programmingpostdoctoratesOpenAIAI safetycomputational complexityScientific AmericanShtetlsHolocaustVitebskMarc Chagallfiddler on the roofTalmudacademicBusy Beaver NumbersTibor RadócomputabilityCambridge University Pressquantum mechanicstime travelanthropic principleQuantum Computing Since Democritusguest speakerFoundational Questions in Science InstituteScience NewsThe AgeSlashdotNew ScientistThe New York TimesForbesComputational Complexity ConferenceSymposium on Theory of ComputingPresidential Early Career Award for Scientists and EngineersSloan Research FellowshipSimons InvestigatorACM FellowJewishMathematics Genealogy ProjectElaine RichStanford UniversityBibcodeABC RadioNational Science Foundation