I can't imagine joining a startup in today's day and age named after the founder (Rigetti computing/ Chad Rigetti). Props to the work they have done so far, but I personally would not have enough faith in the CEO's motives to join a company with a name like that.
How is this any different to Hewlett-Packard or DuPont or thousands of other comparable companies? They sound more like objects or brands than surnames anyway.
Besides you should watch some of Rigetti's speeches, he really seems like a great guy and CEO who is passionate about quantum computing.
Those companies were created at a very different time and are 79 and 216 years old respectively. I can't think of any other moderately successful tech company that has started in recent memory which is named after the founder, although perhaps there are a few examples. In my mind, it takes a certain amount of arrogance to name a tech company after yourself; you alone cannot possibly make it great (unlike a law firm, consultancy, hedge fund, etc.) and naming it as such severely discounts the perceived worth of other employees.
>I personally would not have enough faith in the CEO's motives to join a company with a name like that.
on other side - putting your name on something like a company you take some personal responsibility for what that company does as you open yourself and your reputation to the things in the public view like "Riggetti screwed (or did right by) his employees/customers/suppliers" instead of laundering that responsibility through impersonal name.
13 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 42.9 ms ] threadI also own the domain name name quantum.ly so I may have an overwhelming bias on the matter.
Besides you should watch some of Rigetti's speeches, he really seems like a great guy and CEO who is passionate about quantum computing.
on other side - putting your name on something like a company you take some personal responsibility for what that company does as you open yourself and your reputation to the things in the public view like "Riggetti screwed (or did right by) his employees/customers/suppliers" instead of laundering that responsibility through impersonal name.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-08-07/quantum-c...
Has a seemingly less enthusiatic title:
Quantum Computers Today Aren’t Very Useful. That Could Change