Andrew Mueller
banner
sansseriff.bsky.social
Andrew Mueller
@sansseriff.bsky.social
Postdoctoral Scholar @ Caltech

Quantum networks, communication, and superconducting single photon detectors.

Interested in science (inter-)communication
Pinned
During my thesis defense, I dropped this animation I made of a superconducting nanowire single-photon detector I'd helped test during my PhD. There was awkward silence while it ran, which is why I support using limited amounts of epic background music during such talks

www.nasa.gov/centers-and-...
The uv package manager makes python code portable like never before. Instant, trivial reproducibility is now possible.

I made a template repo that generates a download-and-install terminal command. It takes you right from empty terminal to functioning Jupyter notebook 🧪

github.com/sansseriff/s...
November 4, 2025 at 10:35 PM
Reposted by Andrew Mueller
Quitting programming as a career right now because of LLMs would be like quitting carpentry as a career thanks to the invention of the table saw.
July 3, 2025 at 2:36 PM
Does anyone else draw these silly architecture figures of codebases as you learn them? A mishmash of boxes representing files/classes. Circles for event/while loops. Lines and arrows for data flow and events. All of it kinda messy.

Is there a name for this sort of thing? #gamedev #rustlang #SciArt
June 22, 2025 at 9:48 PM
Reposted by Andrew Mueller
I think it can happen to an academic field that you get multiple generations of bad work or shoddy standards enshrined, meaning that the gate-keepers and those training the next generation are kind of anti-selecting for quality and anti-nurturing in their pedagogy.
April 6, 2025 at 6:16 PM
Her: So what if somone says "What's the point in learning about black holes? They have no influence on my life"

Me: If someome says that, then I've already failed as a science communicator.🧪
March 8, 2025 at 7:10 PM
Reposted by Andrew Mueller
Economist @joshgans.bsky.social uses o1-pro to generate a (minor, fun) paper in an hour based on an idea of his, and it gets published in an appropriate peer reviewed journal, with adequate disclosure.

He ends with the same sentiment I am increasingly seeing from fellow academics: what now?
February 5, 2025 at 7:25 PM
Tantamount to: "You wouldn't expect an AI robot to fix a leaky sink if you only ever showed it shakespearean sonnets about plumbing"
Not a single AI science agent paper I've read so far tackles the issue that actual scientific discovery bears no resemblance to the hypothetico-deductive veneer given by the papers describing results.

So asking agents to match the literature and/or solve problems in this way feels very off ...
January 11, 2025 at 9:14 PM
JPL seems mostly unscathed following the fires. But many employees undoubobly lost their homes in Altadena, less than a kilometer away.

Img credit A Jefferson
January 9, 2025 at 7:08 PM
I worry that interactive figures in online-only publications can exist mainly to make the author feel sophisticated and good about themselves. 🧪
December 30, 2024 at 7:17 PM
Defense Charts is such a gem
December 28, 2024 at 6:10 PM
Reposted by Andrew Mueller
Considering the beam in my own eye for a moment: the challenge I face is that ill-informed denial fills me with so much impatience that I struggle to empathize with the (legitimate) fear and concern motivating it.

I'm trying to remind myself to think about people, and not just their bad arguments.
December 27, 2024 at 6:27 PM
The conundrum of AI and github copilot:

I've created complex typescript projects; more than 20k lines. Nuanced, effective type system. Clever implementation and architecture.

I also can't remember the differences between for(), forEach(), and Map().
December 26, 2024 at 6:41 PM
Have your @matplotlib.bsky.social plots ever looked a little fuzzy or low-res in @projectjupyter.bsky.social notebooks? Try configuring matplotlib for retina displays with this command 🧪

%config InlineBackend.figure_format = 'retina'
December 22, 2024 at 10:31 PM
Reposted by Andrew Mueller
The Metascience 2025 conference is now open for proposals for pre-conference symposia (virtual), panel sessions, brief talks and posters.

If you have not attended, this is a special meeting that draws attendees from all sectors who are interested in understanding and improving science as a system.
Call for Proposals - Metascience
The call for proposals for Metascience 2025 is open with a deadline of 7 February 2025.
metascience.info
December 12, 2024 at 4:30 PM
Reposted by Andrew Mueller
It's when intermediaries — like travel agents — are made redundant because consumers go directly to producers.

In this case, the logic would be that if students gradually become dependent on AI tutors and AI assistants, there may come a point when universities are mainly cafeterias / gyms.
December 17, 2024 at 8:14 PM
Reposted by Andrew Mueller
I just sat down in a chair, and was supported because of trillions of quantum-mechanical interactions between the particles in my butt and the particles in the seat. This lends credence to the notion that quantum computation occurs in many parallel universes, an idea first propo
December 14, 2024 at 12:12 AM
If anyone ever needs a matplotlib plot in dark mode, I made a function that auto-converts most elements during export 🌙🧪

github.com/sansseriff/s...
December 14, 2024 at 2:54 AM
Reposted by Andrew Mueller
It's incredible how accurately Shel Silverstein predicted AI decades ago
December 7, 2023 at 3:00 AM
The video journalists -- I fear them

They will set up purple and blue lights in my lab. They will make me wear a lab coat. They will make me use hand gestures 😱🧪
December 13, 2024 at 5:03 AM
Reposted by Andrew Mueller
December 11, 2024 at 6:06 PM
"That model built around taking the products of academic labor, packing it, and selling it back through the mediation of university libraries has been breaking down for some time."

And journals selling their libraries to AI companies is just another step in that problematic process. Great listen 🧪
Generative Dialogues: Generative AI in Higher Education
Podcast · mark · A series of conversation about generative artificial intelligence and its implications for higher education, hosted by Helen Beetham and Mark Carrigan. Helen Beetham researches criti...
open.spotify.com
December 11, 2024 at 5:47 PM
The only part of google’s recent quantum computer 'achievement' that has significant merit (the fault tolerance result, arxiv.org/abs/2408.13687) is the part that’s been known since August. Which is interesting, because it means all the recent excitement stems from a publicity exercise 🧪
December 10, 2024 at 11:46 PM
This might be the most dramatic improvement to laboratory software I've made🧪🧵
December 10, 2024 at 8:14 PM
Reposted by Andrew Mueller
Debugging my code
December 4, 2024 at 7:03 AM
I suspect this will become a central part of academic writing in the future.

Along with tooling for fine-grained tracking of what is human-written vs what is ai-written and human-approved.
Ultimately the thing I care about most is if a human has evaluated the message and found it to be high enough quality that they're willing to stake their own credibility on what it says

Provided the message accurately represents them I'm not too bothered about how they produced the individual words
December 4, 2024 at 12:03 AM