$INFQ I'm sharing this clip here to set the record straight. @ChipStockInvest recently covered quantum stocks where they called @infleqtion “a conceptual idea” with “zero revenue”.
This is a fundamental misunderstanding of one of the more important public quantum companies, and potentially damaging because the YouTube channel has 256,000 subscribers who may not know better.
Infleqtion is not some paper concept. It is a real quantum company with 200+ employees, two Boulder campuses, decades of operating history going back to ColdQuanta, an advanced quantum sensing business, active customers, public financials, and a serious neutral atom roadmap.
Infleqtion reported $9.5M in Q1 2026 revenue, up 14% year over year, and guided to at least $40M in 2026 revenue.
Why does reporting accurately matter so much? In quantum, the public already has to sort through hype, technical complexity, SPAC noise, timelines, modalities, sensing vs computing, logical qubits, error correction, defense applications, and commercial readiness. The sector is complicated. Every company is unique and has it's own strengths and weaknesses. It is damaging to a sector when an entire important company is wholesale dismissed.
So when people cover the space, the baseline needs to be research and precision.
We can be bullish or bearish on $INFQ. We can debate valuation. We can question commercialization timelines. We can prefer IonQ, Quantinuum, IBM, Google, QuEra, D-Wave, or another quantum company.
But saying Infleqtion is “not a company yet” or has “zero revenue” is simply wrong.
And it matters because Infleqtion is one of the few quantum names with real revenue today, an existing sensing business, national security exposure, and a legitimate place in the neutral atom race. Two quantum executive orders were signed in the Oval Office this week, and Matt Kinsella, the CEO of Infleqtion, was standing behind President Trump.
This sector is moving fast. Just this week, the White House elevated quantum as a national priority, and QuEra/AWS pushed fault-tolerant quantum timelines into the 2028 conversation.
The information gap in quantum investing is already huge. We need to educate and inform the public in a thoughtful way. I appreciate all the coverage on the quantum space, and the new interest, but I encourage bigger channels like this to really do their research and understand the companies they are talking about. Getting it this wrong is harmful and should be corrected.
At a stock price of $13 per share at a $2.8b market cap, @infleqtion is truthfully one of the most undervalued stocks in the quantum sector. Infleqtion received a direct $100mm investment from the U.S. government, has existing and growing revenue from their quantum sensing business, and has an aggressive path to scaling logical qubits on neutral atom quantum computers. $INFQ remains misunderstood, undervalued, and under-appreciated.
$INFQ $RGTI $QBTS $IONQ $XNDU $QUBT $BBCQ $RAAQ $HQ $IBM $BTQ $LAES $OONEF $QNC $ARQQ
In a new video, Jo Frost, aka Supernanny, warns that some modern parents are hindering their kids’ independence by choosing short-term convenience over teaching basic life skills.
The Instagram post featuring the video is filled with comments from teachers agreeing with her that it’s a growing concern.
@Jo_Frost
Humanoid skills are about to make Claude Skills look like a joke
Unitree just launched UNISTORE, an app store for humanoid robots.
You can create, publish, buy, and deploy robot skills with one click across all their models.
Just the motion library is live right now: basic moves, dances, martial arts, all available as free downloads.
It's only out in China now (international coming soon).
But the platform move is obvious: Unitree is building the iOS of physical robots.
Now imagine what this looks like once it matures:
Right now when you download a skill for Claude or Codex, it changes how your AI writes and works inside your computer.
It's all just digital output, stuff that happens on a screen.
But when you download a skill for a robot, it changes what a physical machine can do in your house, your warehouse, your office.
One click and suddenly your robot knows how to make coffee.
Another and it's running nightly inventory in a warehouse, sorting and logging without supervision.
Another and it's harvesting ripe produce row by row from your garden, adjusting grip pressure for each fruit so nothing gets bruised.
We're going from downloading apps for phones to downloading skills for AI to downloading physical capabilities for robots that operate in the real world.
Very cool to think about.
I made a visual of what this might look like in the future:
Here's a juxtaposition of the new Pitt🏀roster and last year's team. It includes notes for each new guy. I think it shows more talent and depth at every position👇🏽
Weak coaches say "just keep working at it."
Coach Narduzzi puts the film on and shows you exactly why you're not playing.
That kind of honesty doesn't just build better players — it builds better people.
Episode 115 of The Playbook with Colin Jonov breaks down the standard, the culture, and the brutal honesty it takes to build something that lasts.
Coach Pat Narduzzi — it's an honor.
Live NOW. Go listen. 🎙️
@CoachDuzzPittFB@Pitt_FB
Small was a walk-on guard at Pitt from 2002-2006, and worked in the Pitt athletic department from 2006-2013. One of the fastest-rising basketball administrators in college athletics continues to climb the ladder. A future AD candidate. #H2P
Watch Botswana 🇧🇼 win 4x400m GOLD at the World Relays in a new African Record & Championship Record of 2:54.47!!🤯🤯
🥈 South Africa 🇿🇦 2:55.07 (NR)
🥉 Australia 🇦🇺 2:55.20 (AR)
https://t.co/nqyABar2QB
I had an aunt who built an events management company up from scratch. She was so successful she was the go-to for big corporates hosting trade shows and galas in Singapore.
She was always working. She'd go to bed after midnight and be up by 4am to start her day, every single day.
Even weekends.
When I was 16 years old, I asked her, "aunty Jean I don't understand how you do this. I wish I had your work ethic. How are you doing this?"
She paused to think and then said, "oh it's easy. Secret water."
I was incredulous. "WHAT? What is that?"
"Secret Water, lah!
You remember in Space Jam? When they were losing at half-time and Bugs Bunny just took ordinary tap water, filled up a sports bottle, and labeled it 'Michael's Secret Stuff.' So the team believed it was some super powerful secret drink from Michael Jordan that would make them unstoppable, which is how they won?"
"Okay so you just... convince yourself you're not tired and you become not tired?"
"Yes"
That convo changed me for life. Generally lying is bad but I find that "strategic delusion" can be quite useful.
It's where you lie to yourself for a good purpose.
I've managed to trick myself into liking things I absolutely hate. Such as running long distance.
Yomif Kejelcha may have one of the wildest range profiles in distance running history.
In this moment:
Second-fastest man ever at 5K.
Second-fastest ever at 10K.
Second-fastest ever at the half marathon.
Second-fastest ever at the marathon
Yomif Kejelcha is basically the greatest No. 2 the sport has ever seen
Luke Falk shared a Mike Leach story that stopped me cold:
Two kids. One rich. One poor.
Every training camp, Coach Leach told his team about these 2 kids.
The rich kid has two choices.
Get soft. Get entitled. Expect everything handed to him because he was handed more.
Or take the resources, the coaching, the opportunities, and compound them into something greater.
The poor kid has two choices too.
Say nobody gave him anything. Blame the world. Make his circumstances the reason he never became what he could have been.
Or outwork everyone in the room.
Luke said the locker room had both. Kids from wealth. Kids from nothing. Kids with every advantage. Kids who scraped for every inch.
Same choice for all of them.
Ownership or victimhood.
Fuel or excuse.
The rich kid can waste the head start or build on it.
The poor kid can drown in the deficit or weaponize it.
Greatness doesn't come from where you start.
It comes from which kid you choose to feed.
Credit to @coachlukefalk for continuing to share golden nuggets about Coach’s legacy
THE FIRST MAN IN HISTORY TO BREAK 2 HOURS IN A MARATHON!!!🤯🤯🤯
Sabastian Sawe 🇰🇪 has just shattered the World Record at the London Marathon, running 1:59:30!!!
He makes history as the first man to officially break 2 hours in the marathon.
Yomif Kejelcha 🇪🇹 in his debut ran 1:59:41 to become 2nd fastest alltime, while Jacob Kiplimo 🇺🇬 finished in 2:00:28.
All under the previous World Record.