About

Why QubitSpring exists

We started as a late-night study circle for developers who wanted quantum literacy without leaving their editor habits. Today we still anchor every lesson in reproducible repos, modest claims, and cohort rituals that feel closer to a careful guild than a hype funnel.

Principles

  • Plain language first

    If a sentence cannot survive a code review, it does not ship to learners.

  • Labs over lectures

    Instructors spend more time in shared terminals than on glossy decks.

  • Honest scope

    We say what we skip, especially around hardware and external exams.

  • Community memory

    Forums stay moderated so useful threads remain searchable years later.

Team

HS

Hana Sato

Curriculum Director

Former platform lead who still reviews syllabus diffs the way she once reviewed service graphs.

NK

Noah Kim

Quantum Software Instructor

Builds instructor tooling so live labs fail loudly, recover cleanly, and stay boring in the best way.

EP

Evelyn Park

Developer Experience Engineer

Designs narrative scaffolding so abstract gates read like familiar APIs with honest footnotes.

Portrait for Jonas Meyer

Jonas Meyer

Learning Platform Designer

Maps pacing curves to real calendars, not fantasy uninterrupted summers.

AC

Amelia Cho

Admissions and Partnerships Manager

Keeps partner expectations legible and routes clubs, labs, and enterprise clients without theatrics.

Milestones

  1. 2019 — First Seoul study circle with five developers and one borrowed projector.
  2. 2022 — Browser labs replace local-only homework after remote cohort feedback.
  3. 2025 — Partner guilds begin co-hosting review nights for capstone projects.