Wise words and waggishness… April 2026

A selection of notable quotes and comments we’ve come across this month

Marc Ambasna Jones
A black and white headshot of Arthur Richards.

“Robotics is becoming more data-driven, and that has implications for how the field develops and for the kinds of skills future roboticists will need.”

Arthur Richards, professor of robotics and control, University of Bristol, and co-director of the Bristol Robotics Lab, in our briefing paper, From software intelligence to physical work: how AI is reshaping robotics


A headshot of Paul Miller.

“A robot may watch 1,000 videos of someone holding a ball and letting go of it and so it knows that 1,000 times out of 1,000 when you let go of a ball it falls. But that doesn’t mean that it understands Newton’s laws.”

Paul Miller, principle analyst at Forrester Research, talking about the role of AI in robotics, in our in-depth briefing, From software intelligence to physical work: how AI is reshaping robotics


A headshot of Dominic Keen.

“There are a number of niche areas where the UK is particularly strong. We’re quite active in autonomous vehicles at sea, for example, and we have four or five companies that are genuine world leaders. Perhaps not surprising given that we’ve got so much coast around this country.”

Dominic Keen, founder of UK VC Britbots, talking about opportunities for niche robotics innovations in the UK


A headshot of Azmat Hossain.

“In agriculture we have several major projects, one for strawberry picking and tomato picking and one with grape picking. These are very high value crops in an industry where it has been difficult to find workers.”

Azmat Hossain, business development director at start-up Extend Robotics, talking about its UK customer base and upskilling challenges


A headshot of Rory Daniels.

“We’re pushing for more ambition. There is an immense opportunity for the UK to extend AI beyond the screen into hospitals, schools, roads, you name it. So it’s a question of how we deploy it and scale it and seize the opportunity as quickly as possible.”

Rory Daniels, head of emerging technology and innovation, techUK, on the role of education and training in developing a thriving robotics industry


A headshot of Michael Biercuk.

“We don’t know. Nobody knows. And anybody who tells you they know is selling you something.”

Michael Biercuk, CEO and founder of Q-CTRL, on which quantum platform technology will win out in the end, in our article Quantum advantage: why software makers think the tech is now competitive


A headshot of Elham Kashefi.

“It’s about benchmarking and validation. We need to understand what works for which use case.”

Elham Kashefi, chief scientist at the UK’s National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC), talking about how the centre is developing testbeds to run applications across different platforms and assess performance in real-world conditions.


A headshot of Ashley Montanaro.

“It’s not even clear that there will be just one winner. It may be that there are multiple platforms. You use different ones for different applications.”

Ashley Montanaro, co-founder of Phasecraft, talking about developing software for the different quantum computing platforms.


A headshot of Simon Fried.

“You want to get to a point where developers don’t need to think about the underlying system. They should be able to define the problem and let the software handle the rest.”

Simon Fried, VP of communications at Classiq, talking about building software tools to enable quantum computing progression and invention.


A headshot of Tom Henriksson.

“We’re seeing a lot of investment in hybrid AI and quantum setups in HPC, and these will start delivering ROI before full quantum advantage is a reality.”

Tom Henriksson, general partner at OpenOcean, in our article Will AI and sovereign pressures on data centres lead to faster quantum innovations?


A headshot of Wenmiao Yu.

“We’re already seeing the rollout of hardware security modules that integrate Quantum Random Number Generators (QRNGs) and post-quantum cryptography (PQC), with examples including the Thales Luna HSM, Fortanix DSM, and Entrust systems.”

Wenmiao Yu, co-founder of Quantum Dice, when asked whether data centre operators are taking quantum-safe security seriously


A headshot of Simon Phillips.

“Quantum is unlikely to drive the same kind of data centre infrastructure expansion that AI is currently causing. In the near to medium term it will be a highly specialised capability that complements classical systems rather than replacing them.”

Simon Phillips, CTO at OQC, on where quantum technologies will integrate with existing data centre solutions


Simon McIntosh-Smith.

“Quantum computers are expected to augment rather than replace classic computing. It’s likely that quantum computers will be added into existing facilities.”

Simon McIntosh-Smith, director of the Bristol Centre for Supercomputing, on how he sees quantum working within traditional data centres

Marc Ambasna Jones
Marc Ambasna Jones / Working as a technology journalist and writer since 1989, Marc has written for a wide range of titles on technology, business, education, politics and sustainability, with work appearing in The Guardian, The Register, New Statesman, Computer Weekly and many more.

Working as a technology journalist and writer since 1989, Marc has written for a wide range of titles on technology, business, education, politics and sustainability, with work appearing in The Guardian, The Register, New Statesman, Computer Weekly and many more.

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