Science & Technology

From physics to software — models and tools that reshape capability and constraint.

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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 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
Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled The Shadow Universe: Antimatter, Time, and the Mystery of Symmetry.

The Shadow Universe: Antimatter, Time, and the Mystery of Symmetry

Why does our universe exist in matter, when physics tells us it should have been born in perfect balance with antimatter? From CPT symmetry to Feynman’s vision of particles moving backward in time, from Penrose’s maps of spacetime to Hawking’s idea of imaginary time, the mystery deepens. This essay explores a radical possibility: that antimatter was never lost, but displaced into a shadow universe, unfolding along a different rhythm of time. Could this hidden twin still whisper across the folds of spacetime — perhaps even reaching from tomorrow into today?

14 min read
Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled Written in Our Code: Aging, DNA, and the Quiet Countdown.

Written in Our Code: Aging, DNA, and the Quiet Countdown

Aging is not just skin deep—it is written into our very DNA. As telomeres shorten and proteins lose their shape, the body’s essential functions slowly unravel. Death is not an intruder but a quiet countdown coded within us. Yet in this inevitability lies not despair, but meaning—the chance to live fully in the time we have.

4 min read
Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled Healing Abandonment Wounds: From Trauma to Safety and Self-Compassion.

Healing Abandonment Wounds: From Trauma to Safety and Self-Compassion

Abandonment wounds run deep, shaping how we navigate love, trust, and safety. Through understanding trauma, conditions like BPD, and the power of compassionate healing, we can begin to rewrite the painful inner monologue and move toward genuine connection and self-compassion.

Cover artwork (cover.png) for the article titled Where the Masks Slip: On Solitude, Autism, and the Discomfort of Discrepancy.

Where the Masks Slip: On Solitude, Autism, and the Discomfort of Discrepancy

In a world that rewards contradiction and curated personas, those of us who seek coherence between thought, word, and action often find ourselves alone. This reflection explores the tension between autism, honesty, and the quiet refuge of solitude—where truth is not just valued, but necessary for peace.

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