Science
Science
Why Aircraft Landing Gear Is More Important Than It Looks . AI-Generated.
When most people think about aviation, their minds go straight to wings slicing through the sky or powerful engines roaring at takeoff. I used to think the same way. Yet the more I read about aviation history and aircraft design, the more I realized that one of the most critical moments of any flight happens when the aircraft is no longer flying at all. It happens at touchdown when everything depends on the landing gear.
By Beckett Dowhan2 months ago in FYI
Indonesia Logistics Market: Infrastructure Development, Digitalization, and Supply Chain Expansion. AI-Generated.
According to IMARC Group’s latest research publication, the Indonesia logistics market size reached USD 72.4 Billion in 2025. Looking forward, the market is expected to reach USD 132.2 Billion by 2034, exhibiting a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 6.91% during 2026-2034.
By Abhishek Rastogi2 months ago in FYI
Walking on the Moon
The moment my boots touched the lunar surface, time seemed to slow. Not in the clichéd way movies make it feel, but in a subtle, almost imperceptible stretch—like every heartbeat and every breath mattered more than it had on Earth. The world I knew, with its endless noise and constant motion, felt impossibly distant. All that existed was the gray dust beneath me, the black sky above, and the soft curve of Earth glowing in the distance.
By Talha khan2 months ago in FYI
Kuwait Perfume Market: Fragrance Consumption Trends, Demand Outlook, and Retail Expansion. AI-Generated.
According to IMARC Group’s latest research publication, the Kuwait perfume market size reached USD 189.27 Million in 2025. Looking forward, IMARC Group expects the market to reach USD 346.05 Million by 2034, exhibiting a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 6.93% during 2026–2034.
By Abhishek Rastogi2 months ago in FYI
Why Are Gemstones Still Expensive if We Can Grow Them in a Lab?
The world of fine jewelry is currently in the middle of a massive identity crisis. For centuries, the value of a diamond or a ruby was tied directly to its rarity and the immense effort required to pull it from the earth. But today, we live in an era where scientists can grow a perfect, high-quality diamond in a plasma reactor in just a few weeks. These stones are not "fakes." They are chemically, physically, and optically identical to the ones formed under the Earth's crust billions of years ago.
By John Ammerlane2 months ago in FYI
Why Do Humans Need a Varied Diet While Cows Can Survive on Just Grass?
It is a classic question that pops up during long road trips or while staring out at a pasture full of cattle: How is it that a thousand-pound cow can grow so large and stay so healthy just by eating grass, while humans require a complex balance of fruits, vegetables, proteins, and grains just to keep our hair from falling out?
By John Ammerlane2 months ago in FYI
How Early Jet Engines Sparked a New Era of Innovation. AI-Generated.
The roar came first low, trembling, unfamiliar. On a windy August afternoon in 1939, as engineers gathered on a test field in Germany, a small aircraft rolled forward with a sound no one had ever heard before. It wasn’t the rattling, mechanical growl of a piston engine. It was something cleaner. Sharper. Almost futuristic.
By Beckett Dowhan2 months ago in FYI
Ground Beef Recalled: Fear, Trust, and the Food on Our Tables
The words ground beef recalled carry a quiet panic. They appear on screens late at night, during grocery runs, or after dinner is already cooking. Food is intimate. It enters our bodies. It feeds our children. When something so ordinary becomes a risk, it shakes trust in ways people do not expect. A recall is not just a notice. It is a moment of doubt. Did I buy this? Did I already eat it? Is my family safe? This article looks closely at why ground beef recalls happen, how they affect everyday life, and what they reveal about the fragile relationship between people and the systems that feed them. This is not about alarm. It is about awareness, care, and responsibility.
By Muqadas khan2 months ago in FYI
Why Bell’s Early Rotorcraft Still Influence Today’s Helicopters. AI-Generated.
I still remember the first time I stood under a helicopter as it lifted into the air, the wind from its rotor washing over me like a sudden storm. I stared upward, absolutely stunned by how something so heavy could hover in place as if supported by invisible hands. That moment planted a question in me: How did humans figure out how to do this?
By Beckett Dowhan3 months ago in FYI
What Happened in Every Second of 2025
I think we can all agree that 2025 was an eventful year. Every day brought us closer to 2026, and despite being constantly bombarded with information, it is impossible to be aware of absolutely everything. In many ways, every second counted.
By Dave's Your Uncle!3 months ago in FYI





