future
Exploring the future of science today, while looking back on the achievements from yesterday. Science fiction is science future.
The Unseen Cost of the AI Boom: Can We Code a Greener Future?. AI-Generated.
We’re living in the midst of an intelligence explosion. Not the sci-fi kind with rogue robots, but a very real, very rapid revolution driven by Artificial Intelligence. From chatbots that craft sonnets to algorithms that predict complex protein folds, the promise of AI is staggering. It’s automating the mundane, supercharging creativity, and solving problems that have baffled us for decades.
By GadgetGround3 months ago in Futurism
Clean, Green, Renewable: What U.S. Energy Companies Need to Know When Choosing Software
The renewable energy race isn’t just about building solar farms or wind projects anymore, it’s about finishing them on time and staying compliant. In the USA, every clean energy developer knows what’s at stake: Investment Tax Credit (ITC) deadlines, “Build America, Buy America (BABA)” requirements, Foreign Entity of Concern (FEOC) restrictions, and the pressure to go carbon-neutral while keeping projects profitable.
By Sergey Laptick3 months ago in Futurism
AGARTHA: And the Legend of a Hidden Civilization Beneath Our Feet
For more than a century, the idea of a hidden world beneath our feet has hovered at the edge of historical curiosity. The name Agartha appears like an old memory across cultures, resurfacing in Tibetan texts, resurfacing in European esoteric traditions, resurfacing in twentieth-century military archives, and resurfacing again in modern testimonies from explorers who claim encounters far beyond what conventional archaeology allows.
By The Secret History Of The World3 months ago in Futurism
Life On Demand
Introduction Yesterday I was at a work conference and my dad called me four times. Now normally I could text and say I would call back later, and that would be Ok, but despite having a state-of-the-art phone, my dad doesn't read texts because he does not know how to.
By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred 3 months ago in Futurism
GCC Perfume Market: Premium Fragrances, Brand Innovation & Expanding Consumer Trends. AI-Generated.
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) perfume market is experiencing remarkable growth, fueled by a unique blend of cultural tradition, rising affluence, and evolving consumer preferences. Fragrances have always held a special place in Arabian culture—deeply embedded in daily rituals, religious practices, and social customs. From traditional oud, attars, and bakhoor to contemporary luxury blends, perfumes in the region represent far more than personal grooming; they are symbols of identity, hospitality, and heritage.
By Abhay Rajput3 months ago in Futurism
The Quantum Leap: How Quantum Computing Will Revolutionize Our Future. Content Warning. AI-Generated.
The Dawn of a New Era Quantum computing has been a topic of fascination for decades, but recent advancements have brought it closer to practical application than ever before. Traditional computers rely on bits, which are either 0 or 1, to process information. Quantum computers, on the other hand, use qubits that can exist in multiple states simultaneously thanks to quantum superposition and entanglement. This allows them to perform calculations at a speed and scale that classical computers simply cannot match.
By Bevan Keren3 months ago in Futurism
Worlds With Three Suns: The Strange and Stunning Reality of Triple-Star Planets
Most of us grow up imagining a solar system as something simple and orderly: a single star with a neat family of planets circling around it. Our own Sun reinforces that picture. But the universe rarely sticks to simple patterns. Among the billions of stars in the Milky Way, there exist far more complex arrangements — including triple-star systems. And what’s even more astonishing is that some of these systems are home to planets that orbit all three stars at once.
By Holianyk Ihor3 months ago in Futurism
NASA’s Psyche Mission Is Headed Toward a Metal World Worth $10,000 Quadrillion
In October 2023, NASA launched one of its most intriguing deep-space missions yet — Psyche, a robotic explorer on a years-long journey to a mysterious metallic asteroid unlike anything humanity has ever visited. This strange object, named 16 Psyche, isn’t valuable because it hides alien technology or secret energy sources, but because it appears to be made largely of metal. Not just any metal — we’re talking about iron, nickel, and potentially precious metals that, on Earth, form the backbone of modern industry.
By Holianyk Ihor3 months ago in Futurism











