Shahjahan Kabir Khan
Stories (406)
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The Digital Mask: How Technology Is Changing The Way We See Ourselves
Once, our sole means of looking at ourselves was through a mirror. The mirror is just one tool nowadays, used less often than the front-facing camera, the polished internet profile, the optimized "best angle," and the digital creation of ourselves.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Confessions
Work Reinvented: The 12 Smart Gadgets Changing How We Learn, Create, and Stay Focused
Along with what we create, the tools we use have an effect on our ideas, work patterns, and attention management. Formerly, productivity referred to finishing more work in less time. Today, however, smart technology is redefining that meaning to give more weight on less stress, more effective operation, and deliberate concentration.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
iPhone 18 Leak Shock: Apple’s First True Reinvention in Years Might Finally Be Here
We’ve seen leaks before. We’ve seen rumors before. But this — this feels different. For years, new iPhone generations have followed a familiar pattern: slightly better camera, shapelier edges, maybe a new color, and some new software refinement. But whispers surrounding the iPhone 18 point to something bigger — a genuine architectural shift in how we’ll interact with the device that defines modern life.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The New Internet Race: How Countries Are Building Their Own Online Worlds
From Africa's digital independence to Asia's developing platforms, a delicate change is reshaping the worldwide web. For many, the internet appears as one massive linked world where people browse, share, and stream on the same sites. But this view is shrinking. Country by country is creating their own online environments slowly and rather surreptitious. The question has changed over the past ten years from "Who governs the internet?" to "Which internet are we using?"
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The Next Tablet War: How 2025 Became the Year Apple, Samsung, and Tesla Finally Collided
Introduction: A Battle We Didn’t See Coming Every few years, technology companies forecast a revolution. 2025, meanwhile, strikes differently. It is rather something surprisingly familiar: a rise in human creativity and innovation rather than a breakthrough in artificial intelligence or a new smartphone.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The Silent Tech Takeover: How New Devices Are Reshaping Our Lives Without Us Noticing
The World That Changed While We Weren’t Looking Once it seemed that innovation was a magnificent affair. New innovations swirled onto the market, groundbreaking breakthroughs made headlines, and people impatiently awaited product releases that appeared like major events in history. However, in the modern world the most innovative developments seem to occur silently as software updates, suggested apps, or fashionable gadgets that we eagerly embrace since everyone else is already employing them.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The Last Authentic Moment: Can Humanity Survive in a World Where Everything Looks Real?
The Era Where “Seeing Is Believing” Finally Died Once, not too far back, a single image was seen as fact. Proving evidence was found in a video. An audio recording might settle a fight. Reality had credibility, presence, and substance.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
When the World’s Tech Stopped Breathing: How One Economic Shock Exposed the Fragile Heart of Modern Power
The Day the Tech World Held Its Breath Imagine waking up one morning to find that the entire world’s supply of advanced computer chips — the ones inside your phone, your car, your hospital equipment, your AI tools, even the satellites above your head — had suddenly stalled.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The Illusion of Control: Why We Try to Manage Everything — and Still Feel Lost
Thinking we have the reins gives off a strange certainty. We create task lists, set reminders, manage our spending, monitor every action we take, and calculate how many hours of sleep we should attain. As though we could reduce the ambiguity by great discipline, we maintain our email accounts, create our virtual identities, and plan our futures.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Psyche











