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Divide and rule: Mega‑fences that change history
People have always sought to mark boundaries to protect their space. Sometimes, the everyday impulse to fence off land evolved into something else entirely—titanic constructions stretching thousands of kilometers across deserts, steppes, and mountains. These vast artificial barriers radically reshape natural landscapes, transform fragile planetary ecosystems, and even influence cloud formation. These effects are clearly visible in satellite imagery from space.
"Made in Space"—guide to new cosmic super‑economy
SpaceX's move onto Wall Street put Elon Musk's space plans back in the headlines. The world's richest person is focused on large‑scale settlement of the Solar System and development of near‑Earth infrastructure, and SpaceX currently controls roughly 90% of the global market. Space has ceased to be an arena of exclusive state vanity and has become the most promising economic sector of the 21st century. The era of romantic stargazing has given way to pragmatic calculations by venture funds and multinational corporations.
‘Big Bang’ of physical AI: Nvidia at GTC Taipei
At the GTC Taipei conference, tech giant Nvidia officially announced the dawn of a new technological era—the "big bang" of physical artificial intelligence. AI is moving beyond virtual dialogue windows to gain a physical presence, enabling it to directly interact with the material world. We are witnessing a future where digital intelligence becomes the driving force of our physical reality
From shells to Bitcoin: great evolution of collective trust
Money is perhaps humanity's most ingenious and strangest invention. Its basis is not physical utility but the collective psychology of trust. Over millennia, the concept of value has undergone astonishing twists, gradually shedding its material shell. Money has evolved from a medium of exchange into pure information. The history of finance is the story of how people learned to trust phantom symbols, digitizing the very essence of human labor and time.
Closer to nature: quiet revolution of biohacking
In the pursuit of progress, humanity has long relied on chemistry, silicon, and heavy engineering. But the world is undergoing a quiet revolution — a "biohacking of reality." Scientists, tech giants, and municipal services are rediscovering the potential of living nature, often in completely unexpected ways. Indeed, evolution has produced perfect mechanisms over millions of years that solve complicated problems more efficiently than any supercomputer. Biological methods are becoming a leading trend in the smart management of our civilisation.
Green aliens: most incredible trees of our planet
We are used to seeing trees as a static green background. Yet, evolution sometimes creates true botanical anomalies. Around the world, plants break the rules of physics, engineering, and geometry to survive extreme conditions. They turn into giant water tanks, change bark color like impressionist canvases, and grow fruit directly on trunks. Trees are not just oxygen sources. They are living chronicles of the Earth, capable of outliving entire empires.
Digital takeover — how AI works instead of humans
The experiments are over. Artificial intelligence is moving en masse into real jobs. The collision of algorithms with chaotic human reality produced unique precedents. Neural networks do not know laziness or fatigue, but they make absurd mistakes where ordinary human common sense will prevail. Let us look at how AI officially tried on human professions and what digital autonomy may lead to.
Back to Pleasantville — why world agrees to monochrome?
Have you seen the film Pleasantville? In it, a black‑and‑white ideologically sterile 1950s town begins to gain color as its residents discover strong emotions—passion, anger, freedom, and the joy of art. There, color is a synonym for life. Looking at the modern world, it seems we have run that film in reverse. This is not just a fashion whim. It is a global shift in perceptual psychology, where the safety of neutrality wins out over the risk of self‑expression. We are voluntarily returning to visual Pleasantville. Until awakening?
From Michelangelo and Notre‑Dame to tractor — how far AI may go?
We no longer speak of artificial intelligence in the future tense. The era of hype is over, and AI has moved into real implementation, gaining physical embodiment. It no longer only automates processes in the virtual space. It now controls machines and tools and even helps recreate lost heritage. AI agents can drive tractors, sculpt marble, and assist people in movement. What yesterday seemed like science fiction is becoming everyday reality, with AI acting as a full co-author of our physical world.
How landscape showcases status and power
The status of certain gardens and parks functions as a way of displaying power, wealth, and control over nature. Public parks create a nation's image, private gardens signal personal status, and ceremonial green spaces become stages for diplomacy. A leader's visit to a temple garden or the creation of a lavish landscape at a mansion — these are examples of status symbols that the elites always manifest.
AI unleashes potential: from reviving lost voices to unearthing ancient cities
The world has ceased to be an "archive of immutability." Lost is no longer permanent, and what is locked away is no longer secure. Artificial intelligence has disrupted this paradigm, serving as both a digital "key" and a gateway to long-lost treasures. Today, algorithms can restore voices and recover wealth hidden under forgotten passwords, while also threatening global financial security. We are entering an era where the gap between "impossible" and "achieved" is defined solely by computational power
BTS pop band: catalyst of national economy
South Korea has achieved the impossible: it has transformed from an agrarian country into a global trend‑setter in a few decades. The Korean hype (Hallyu) is not just fashion — it is soft power in its purest form. Koreans understood that genuine emotion, flawless visuals, and high‑quality storytelling sell better than barrels of petroleum. South Korea is a unique example of a country that does not just sell goods. It sells a lifestyle, making the world admire its technical achievements, buy up cosmetics, and track beloved artists on social media.
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