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How to create science fiction and technology projects in a simplistic, easy manner.
Discovering Subsurface Oceans on Jupiter’s Moons: A New Frontier in the Search for Life
For much of modern astronomy, the search for life beyond Earth focused on planets orbiting within the so-called “habitable zone” of their stars — regions where liquid water could exist on the surface. However, discoveries made over the past few decades have dramatically expanded this view. One of the most profound revelations in planetary science is the discovery of vast subsurface oceans hidden beneath the icy shells of Jupiter’s moons. These concealed oceans have transformed frozen, distant worlds into some of the most promising environments for extraterrestrial life in our Solar System.
By Holianyk Ihorabout a month ago in Futurism
How Portland Engineers Reduce Mobile App ANRs and Crashes?
Alex Morgan didn’t need another crash report to know something was wrong. Crash-free session rates still looked acceptable on paper. Automated tests were green. QA sign-off came without resistance. Yet real users were telling a different story—one that didn’t fit neatly into dashboards.
By Mike Pichaiabout a month ago in Futurism
Private Orbital Cities in the 2030s: How Humanity May Begin Living Above Earth
By the 2030s, the concept of private orbital cities is expected to move decisively from visionary speculation to practical implementation. What once belonged exclusively to the domain of science fiction and government-funded space programs is now being actively explored by private aerospace companies, investors, and architects. These orbital settlements will not merely host astronauts on short missions; they are designed to support long-term human presence, economic activity, and even emerging space-based communities.
By Holianyk Ihorabout a month ago in Futurism
The Infrastructure of the Interplanetary Internet: Building a Network Beyond Earth
For most people, the internet is an invisible and instant utility. We send messages, stream videos, and store data in the cloud without thinking about the immense infrastructure that makes it possible. But what happens when humanity moves beyond Earth? As space exploration accelerates and missions to the Moon and Mars become increasingly ambitious, scientists and engineers face a fundamental challenge: how do we build an internet that works across planets?
By Holianyk Ihorabout a month ago in Futurism
Experimental Propulsion Systems Redefining Interplanetary Travel
For more than half a century, humanity’s journey into space has relied primarily on chemical rocket engines. These powerful yet short-lived systems made it possible to reach orbit, land on the Moon, and send robotic explorers to the outer edges of the Solar System. However, as ambitions shift toward sustained human presence on Mars, asteroid mining, and deep-space exploration, it has become increasingly clear that traditional propulsion technologies are reaching their practical limits. To move farther, faster, and more efficiently, space agencies and private companies are now turning their attention to a new generation of experimental engines designed specifically for interplanetary travel.
By Holianyk Ihorabout a month ago in Futurism
How Solar Winds Are Reshaping the Surface of Mercury
Mercury, the innermost planet of our Solar System, is often described as a silent, lifeless world — a scorched sphere of rock orbiting perilously close to the Sun. For a long time, scientists assumed that its surface was largely static, shaped mainly by ancient volcanic activity and impacts billions of years ago. Recent space missions, however, have revealed a far more dynamic reality. Mercury’s surface is constantly changing, sculpted by one of the most powerful and relentless forces in the Solar System: the solar wind.
By Holianyk Ihorabout a month ago in Futurism
How Pain Clinics Can Seamlessly Transition to EMR
Managing chronic pain is hard enough without paperwork getting in the way. Picture a busy clinic where clinicians scrambling through piles of paper charts, handwritten notes scrawled on clipboards, lost files delaying follow-ups, and billing errors from illegible scribbles. Each lookup or data entry is inefficient and process prone to mistakes. No wonder, practices feel constant pressure to modernize.
By Sergey Laptickabout a month ago in Futurism
Exploring New Frontiers: Innovative Methods to Find Exoplanets Around Red Dwarfs
In the quest to understand our place in the universe, one of the most exciting frontiers is the search for planets beyond our solar system. Among the most promising targets are red dwarf stars, also known as M-dwarfs.
By Holianyk Ihorabout a month ago in Futurism
The Mystery of Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs): What We Know Now
Since the first discovery of Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) in 2007, these brief, intense flashes of radio waves have become one of the most captivating mysteries in modern astrophysics. With their incredible brightness, extremely short duration, and unknown origins, FRBs have fascinated both professional astronomers and the general public. Despite significant progress in observations and theory, many questions about their nature remain unanswered.
By Holianyk Ihorabout a month ago in Futurism
The "Robot in the Room": Will AI Actually Take Our Jobs?
We’ve all seen the headlines. One day it’s a report from a global bank predicting that 300 million jobs are "exposed" to automation. The next, it’s a viral video of a humanoid robot making a latte or a chatbot writing a legal brief in six seconds.
By George Evan2 months ago in Futurism











