Decentralization might be a good idea... #Cloudflare
The internet can learn a lot from crypto. Why do we entrust so much of the internet with a few big players and create single points of failure, when we could build something that benefits the many?
Read More
Reimagining Molecular Docking with Quantum Simulation
Drug discovery loses billions because most drug candidates fail early. Quantum simulation offers a more accurate way to model molecular behaviour, addressing major limitations in classical docking and improving the odds of finding effective treatments.
Read More
How does the Internet work? Part 2: Autonomous Systems (AS)
Every network on the internet operates as an Autonomous System (AS) with a unique ASN. Discover how 73,000+ ASes use BGP to exchange routes based on business relationships, why anyone can hijack internet traffic, and what it really costs to run your own AS in the global routing table.
Read More
The Epstein Emails: What New Disclosures Reveal About Trump's Knowledge
Three emails. Eight years apart. One recurring theme: Epstein believed Trump knew. The new disclosures challenge Trump’s narrative of distance and ignorance, also exposing the deeper machinery of influence that protected Epstein for decades.
Read More
How does the Internet work? Part 1: Network Tiers (1, 2, 3)
Networks fall into three tiers based on a simple question: Can they reach the entire internet without paying anyone?
Read More
Decentralization might be a good idea... #Cloudflare
The internet can learn a lot from crypto. Why do we entrust so much of the internet with a few big players and create single points of failure, when we could build something that benefits the many?
Read More
Reimagining Molecular Docking with Quantum Simulation
Drug discovery loses billions because most drug candidates fail early. Quantum simulation offers a more accurate way to model molecular behaviour, addressing major limitations in classical docking and improving the odds of finding effective treatments.
Read More
Tech Stack — Weekly Briefing (Nov 9-15, 2025)
This week brought seismic shifts in AI leadership, record-breaking infrastructure deals, and a funding environment that continues defying gravity. From Meta’s internal shake-up to Microsoft’s European expansion, the week of November 9–15, 2025 delivered a clear message: as AI transitions from research curiosity to industrial necessity, the
Read More
How does the Internet work? Part 2: Autonomous Systems (AS)
Every network on the internet operates as an Autonomous System (AS) with a unique ASN. Discover how 73,000+ ASes use BGP to exchange routes based on business relationships, why anyone can hijack internet traffic, and what it really costs to run your own AS in the global routing table.
Read More
The Epstein Emails: What New Disclosures Reveal About Trump's Knowledge
Three emails. Eight years apart. One recurring theme: Epstein believed Trump knew. The new disclosures challenge Trump’s narrative of distance and ignorance, also exposing the deeper machinery of influence that protected Epstein for decades.
Read More
How does the Internet work? Part 1: Network Tiers (1, 2, 3)
Networks fall into three tiers based on a simple question: Can they reach the entire internet without paying anyone?
Read More
Tech Stack — Weekly Briefing (Nov 2–8, 2025)
Your weekly pulse check on the moves shaping technology and business.
Read More
The Writers in the Machine: How AI Is Rewiring Our Relationship With Words
We've handed writing to machines that learned language by predicting what word comes next. The question isn't whether AI can write—it's what happens to us when we let it.
Read More
Vodafone Germany is changing the open internet — one peering connection at a time
The telecom giant claims its exit from public internet exchanges will give customers "lower latencies." Is putting in the middleman (inter.link) achieving this? After some consideration, that might actually work.
Read More
How Christian Is the German CDU? The Syria Debate Reveals a Party's Soul-Searching
A foreign minister's compassion ignited a firestorm within Germany's Christian Democrats, exposing tensions between the party's professed values and its political instincts
Read More
Don't Die From the Boring Stuff: The Preventive Tests You're Probably Skipping
Your annual physical is the most mundane appointment you'll make all year. It's also possibly the most important.
Read More
The Invisible Shield: Understanding Air Filter Classifications and What They Actually Mean
A comprehensive guide to the alphabet soup of air filtration standards.
Read More
Tech Stack — Weekly Briefing (Oct 26-Nov 1, 2025)
Your Saturday briefing on the week that shaped technology
Read More
America's Food Aid Crisis: Government Shutdown Threatens SNAP
With SNAP benefits halted by the government shutdown, 42 million Americans now face the threat of hunger as families, food banks, and states scramble for solutions.
Read More
The 22nd Amendment vs. Trump’s 2028 Temptation
Trump continues to flirt with the idea of a third term, blending political showmanship with constitutional brinkmanship. But beneath the bravado lies a hard legal reality: the 22nd Amendment leaves no room for presidents-for-life.
Read More
Tech Stack — Weekly Briefing (Oct 19-25, 2025)
Your Saturday briefing on the week that shaped technology
Read More
The Complex Rise of Sanae Takaichi
Japan’s new female prime minister breaks barriers but her far-right stance raises new questions about the country’s future on more accounts than one.
Read More
Seven Minutes at the Louvre: The Fate of France's Crown Jewels
A bold daylight robbery at the Louvre has left France questioning whether its most prized treasures—and its sense of heritage—can ever be fully protected.
Read More
Tech Stack — Weekly Briefing (Oct 12-18, 2025)
Your Saturday briefing on the week that shaped technology
Read More
The Machinery of Retribution: Trump's Systematic Crackdown on Critics
The question is no longer if Trump will weaponize federal power—but how far he will go to secure absolute dominance.
Read More
Innovation and Growth: Understanding the 2025 Nobel Prize in Economics
For thousands of years, human societies barely grew. Then something changed. The 2025 Nobel Prize in Economics recognizes three scholars who've explained this transformation through concepts like "useful knowledge" and "creative destruction"—ideas that shape economic policy worldwide.
Read More
Tech Stack — Weekly Briefing (Oct 5-11, 2025)
Your Saturday briefing on the week that shaped technology
Read More
The 2025 Nobel Peace Prize: Trump's Loss, Machado's Win, and a Legacy of Questionable Choices
Trump didn’t win the Peace Prize—but his shadow loomed large over it. A look at how the Nobel’s past decisions reveal a prize perpetually torn between diplomacy, politics, and irony.
Read More
The medical imaging revolution hiding in plain sight
Silicon Valley has largely overlooked medical imaging, but the physics-meets-AI convergence happening in MRI and CT technology represents one of healthcare's most profound engineering transformations.
Read More
2025 Nobel Prize: How Metal-Organic Frameworks Revolutionized Chemistry
Metal-organic frameworks—crystals with empty internal spaces—are transforming science, from water harvesting in deserts to capturing carbon and storing energy.
Read More