Posts by Sayed Hamid Fatimi

Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled RideCompass: Finding the Cheapest Journey Across Platforms.

RideCompass: Finding the Cheapest Journey Across Platforms

Finding the cheapest ride in London isn’t as simple as picking one app. Prices fluctuate across Uber, Bolt, FreeNow, Smartzee—and even black cabs. Drawing from my time as a driver, I explore the idea of a “Ride Compass”: an app that scans all platforms, compares fares, and ensures passengers always get the best deal.

2 min read
Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled Land on the Ledger: Real-World Assets as NFTs.

Land on the Ledger: Real-World Assets as NFTs

Ownership is more than paperwork. This proposal maps land titles to NFTs so the blockchain becomes the registry itself—legally recognized, programmable, and auditable—uniting code and courts for faster settlement, stronger proofs, and privacy-preserving compliance in the UK/EU.

Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled The End of the Key Fob: Digital Access for a Smarter Age.

The End of the Key Fob: Digital Access for a Smarter Age

A plastic fob once felt modern. Today, it is wasteful, clumsy, and obsolete. Digital passes stored in Apple or Google Wallets can make access smarter, safer, and more sustainable—from offices and hotels to Airbnb rentals and real estate management. The key fob solved a problem of the last century. The digital pass answers to this one.

7 min read
Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled The Distance Between Events.

The Distance Between Events

If time is not a river or a dimension but only the distance between events, what then becomes of us? Is a life measured by years, or by the density of change it contains? This essay traces the haunting question of time—not to answer it, but to wander through its puzzles: the minus sign in the line element, the ghost of dt, antimatter’s supposed reversal, and the possibility of a physics without clocks. Time appears less as something we move through and more as something we ourselves measure—a spacing of events that refuses ever to be final.

13 min read
Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled ShipSpace: Unlocking the Hidden Economy of Empty Cargo.

ShipSpace: Unlocking the Hidden Economy of Empty Cargo

Every year, millions of containers sail half-empty—wasting money, space, and fuel. ShipSpace reimagines global logistics as a shared marketplace, matching unused container capacity with businesses that need affordable shipping. Cheaper, fairer, greener: the future of shipping is shared.

9 min read
Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled The Stain on the Shirt: Perception, Passivity, and the Weight of Goodness.

The Stain on the Shirt: Perception, Passivity, and the Weight of Goodness

Evil does not overwhelm the world, yet a single act of cruelty can feel larger than life—like a stain on a white shirt. Goodness is the quiet backdrop of daily life, but it gains meaning only when it resists. This essay explores the dichotomy of good and evil, the silence of the good, and the weight of responsibility that makes moral choice luminous.

Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled The Necessity of Bear Markets: Creative Destruction and the Discipline of Cycles.

The Necessity of Bear Markets: Creative Destruction and the Discipline of Cycles

Bear markets and recessions are not failures of the system but essential corrections that restore discipline, clear away excess, and redirect capital toward true innovation. While modern policy seeks to avoid downturns at all costs, history shows that renewal and long-term opportunity often emerge from collapse. From the dot-com bust to the COVID-19 recession, it is in the ashes of contraction that the seeds of future growth are sown.

11 min read
Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled Much Ado About Laundering.

Much Ado About Laundering

Wars are not only fought on battlefields but in balance sheets. From Lockheed Martin’s rising stock to British Gas’s soaring profits and offshore billions siphoned by corrupt aides, conflict becomes the perfect laundromat—where fear, scarcity, and blood are spun into profit. This essay exposes how war launders money, legitimacy, and power in plain sight.

Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled The Illusion of Rigour.

The Illusion of Rigour

We trust science, law, and society for their apparent rigour — but beneath the surface lie hidden assumptions and convenient fictions mistaken for certainty. This essay explores how social apriories shape our systems of knowledge, from physics and medicine to the courtroom, revealing that what feels like stone is often only scaffolding. The task is not to discard these illusions, but to see through them with humility and discernment.

8 min read
Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled Traffic Blocks, Self-Driving Cars, and the Case for Road Beacons.

Traffic Blocks, Self-Driving Cars, and the Case for Road Beacons

Traffic is not random—it is the product of inflow and outflow. When more cars enter a road segment than leave it, congestion forms. What lingers, however, is not just the incident itself but the slow, staggered release of human reaction. This essay explores how self-driving cars can shorten those tails, and how a new layer of road infrastructure—information beacons broadcasting simple, low-latency truths—could transform traffic from reaction into cooperation.

10 min read
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