AI Industry Outlook: US, China, And The Full Stack

Trying to look at the machine coldly: stack, energy, culture, policy, and time.

Thinking about AI through the full stack: research, chips, energy, manufacturing, universities, patents, culture, geopolitics, and industrial execution.

  • AI
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Future
  • Market

AI, Markets, And What Remains Scarce

If intelligence and labor become abundant, markets may start pricing very different things.

AI may not make investing obsolete. It may make markets faster while shifting scarcity toward attention, trust, energy, compute, and allocation.

  • AI
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Future

Developing aMUZE: A Look Back Through the Diagrams

With what I know now, I see the ambition, the rough edges, and the system thinking that helped make aMUZE work.

Development diagrams from the aMUZE build, and what they reveal about system thinking, authentication, frontend/backend structure, and hindsight.

  • Projects
  • Startups
  • Engineering
  • Architecture
  • Product

Porting My Personal Website Twice

From Next.js to SvelteKit with Codex, then from Azure to Hetzner.

In 2026 I moved my personal website from Next.js to SvelteKit with OpenAI Codex, then moved the infrastructure from Azure to Hetzner when the practical answer became obvious.

  • Engineering
  • Architecture
  • Cloud
  • AI
  • Tools

The Data Model Is Everything

A product can only understand what its model is able to name, connect, and preserve.

The data model decides what a product can become, and its own UI matters for the people building it.

  • Engineering
  • Architecture
  • Product
  • Information

AI UI Development And Desire Paths

AI makes it practical for interfaces to learn from real behavior and improve beyond the first guess.

AI changes UI work from a one-time prediction into a system that can observe, adapt, and improve around real user paths.

  • AI
  • Design
  • Product
  • Engineering
  • Tools

Revisiting My Investing Scripts

Stock screens, Greek property-listing screens, watchlists, and the recurring need to make judgment visible.

By 2026 the investing work had become a broader private system: stock screens, valuation notes, Greek property-listing extraction, and clearer ways to challenge my own thinking.

  • Engineering
  • Finance
  • Tools
  • Business
  • AI

The Power Of UI

The same weather data can be a table or a dashboard. The difference is how quickly it becomes usable.

A small weather example made the point brutally clear: UI changes how quickly structure becomes meaning.

  • Design
  • Product
  • Information
  • Engineering

From Azure Credits To Hetzner Reality

Remembering a good cloud experience while choosing the economics that fit the product.

By the time the product came back in 2026, the cloud question had changed: Azure still felt serious, but the schedule and cost profile pushed me toward Hetzner.

  • Engineering
  • Cloud
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Tools

Chickens, People, and AI

Regulation, inevitability, and the train that already left.

AI is already extraordinary. The question is whether humans can meaningfully regulate a force that may soon sit above us in the hierarchy.

  • AI
  • Technology
  • Future
  • Philosophy
  • Engineering

AI As A Clean Internet Layer

Not better targeting. Not smarter persuasion. Just the content I asked for, stripped of everything trying to hijack me.

AI should give me the internet without ads, clickbait, sponsored steering, dark patterns, and all the machinery trying to handle my mind.

  • AI
  • Tools
  • Product
  • Psychology
  • Technology

Google UX Course: AI And The Language Of Intent

Prompting made design, coding, architecture, and communication feel much closer than expected.

The AI chapters made something obvious: design direction, communication, coding, and architecture are starting to overlap hard.

  • Design
  • Product
  • Education
  • AI
  • Language

Secure by Design

by Dan Bergh Johnsson, Daniel Deogun, and Daniel Sawano

A useful security architecture book about putting protection into the shape of the system instead of hoping to bolt it on later.

  • Books
  • Engineering
  • Architecture
  • Security
  • Technology

Google UX Course: Wireframes And Product Decisions

Sketching, prototyping, testing, and letting the interface expose weak thinking early.

Wireframes are useful because they make product decisions visible before code makes them expensive.

  • Design
  • Product
  • Education
  • Tools
  • Engineering

Google UX Course: Learning To See The User

Research, empathy, and the discipline of designing beyond your own assumptions.

The first useful shift in the Google UX course was simple: design from evidence and real user paths.

  • Design
  • Product
  • Education
  • Psychology
  • Engineering

Investing: The Ultimate Challenge

Why I keep coming back to markets as an intellectual challenge.

Investing attracts me because it is philosophy with consequences: judgment, incentives, psychology, courage, patience, and money keeping score.

  • Finance
  • Philosophy
  • Business
  • Books

The Design of Everyday Things

by Don Norman

Norman frames good design as communication under constraints and gives useful names to everyday confusion.

  • Books
  • Design
  • Product
  • Psychology
  • Engineering

Genesis

by Henry A. Kissinger, Craig Mundie, and Eric Schmidt

A serious book on AI and civilization that I respected more than I enjoyed. The frame is useful; the conviction did not always land for me.

  • Books
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Future
  • Philosophy

Updating The Investing Engine

A year later, the tables were useful, but the assumptions were the real work.

After a year of working with investing screens, the interesting work moved toward assumptions, owner earnings, watchlists, and making different investing lenses argue.

  • Engineering
  • Finance
  • Books
  • Tools
  • Business

Reminiscences of a Stock Operator

by Edwin Lefevre

An interesting trading classic, but also a warning label. The game is seductive, the discipline is real, and the life around it can still collapse.

  • Books
  • Finance
  • Trading
  • Psychology

Hooked

by Nir Eyal

Nir Eyal gives product behavior a simple loop: trigger, action, variable reward, investment.

  • Books
  • Business
  • Product
  • Design
  • Psychology

Where Good Ideas Come From

by Steven Johnson

Steven Johnson made innovation feel ecological to me: coral reefs, dense cities, pressure, accidents, networks, and slow hunches that finally find oxygen.

  • Books
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Psychology

Reality Transurfing

by Vadim Zeland

I came across Zeland while looking for something good on attention, intention, psychology, and the stranger edges of self-direction.

  • Books
  • Philosophy
  • Psychology

Chip War

by Chris Miller

Chip War made semiconductors feel like the anti-sexy investing case study: boring-looking bottlenecks, industrial depth, and power hiding in supply chains.

  • Books
  • Technology
  • History
  • Business

The Man Who Solved the Market

by Gregory Zuckerman

The Jim Simons story is fascinating because the edge looks almost alien: mathematics, data, secrecy, patience, and a machine built to see patterns humans could not hold.

  • Books
  • Finance
  • Trading
  • Science
  • Technology

Sidepit Exchange

Successfully closed pre-seed

A fair-auction exchange concept for bringing structure to fast-moving markets.

  • Projects
  • Startups
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Trading

Charlie Munger: The Complete Investor

by Tren Griffin

Reading Munger was an absolute pleasure. I felt I had discovered a mentor: sharp, unsentimental, broad, and allergic to beautiful stupidity.

  • Books
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Psychology

Turning Investing Books Into Python Screens

When Greenblatt, Lynch, and a pile of investing books started turning into code.

The investing books became much more useful once their questions started turning into Python screens I could run, inspect, and argue with.

  • Engineering
  • Finance
  • Books
  • Tools
  • Business

Music

A retrospective through 2024 on rhythm, melody, experimentation, performance, and eventually AI-assisted composition.

  • Activities
  • Music

Learn to Earn

by Peter Lynch and John Rothchild

Lynch made business literacy feel practical: own the vocabulary, look at the world, then let screens and formulas start helping.

  • Books
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Education

100 Baggers

by Christopher Mayer

100 Baggers is about the uncomfortable math of patience: rare businesses, long holding periods, reinvestment, and the discipline to let compounding breathe.

  • Books
  • Finance
  • Business

Beating the Street

by Peter Lynch and John Rothchild

Lynch opening the notebook: examples, ordinary clues, business questions, and the discipline of staying close to the actual company.

  • Books
  • Finance
  • Business

The Baby Tamer

A small electronics experiment built around a very practical family problem.

  • Projects
  • Hardware
  • Parenting
  • Life

A Careful Future For AI Music

The technology is too powerful to dismiss and too important to handle carelessly.

AI music should not be discussed only with excitement. That would be lazy. It should also not be discussed only with panic. That would be equally lazy, just with better posture.

  • AI
  • Music
  • Ethics
  • Rights
  • aMUZE

What The Market Taught Us About AI Music

The reactions were mixed in exactly the ways that made the idea feel real.

When an idea is too clean in your head, the market has a helpful habit of walking in with muddy shoes. That is useful. Reality should be allowed to ruin the first version of a pitch.

  • Music
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Market
  • aMUZE

Microsoft Founders Hub Felt Serious

Azure, startup support, and the rare feeling that a platform was actually helping.

During aMUZE, Microsoft Founders Hub and Azure felt professional, useful, and genuinely helpful after a much colder experience with AWS startup support.

  • Startups
  • Engineering
  • Cloud
  • Technology
  • aMUZE

Fundraising And Sleeping In A Car

Startup romance has terrible upholstery.

A small memory from the aMUZE fundraising period: ambition, runway, pressure, and sleeping in a car while trying to keep the story alive.

  • Startups
  • Business
  • Life
  • aMUZE

aMUZE - MVP 1

A production music-generation platform built from the award-winning prototype.

  • Projects
  • Startups
  • Business
  • AI
  • Music

Designing An Interface For Expression

The product should start with a human idea, not with a control panel.

The original aMUZE mission was simple: give people freedom of musical expression regardless of skill, education, or access to resources.

  • Product
  • Design
  • Music
  • AI
  • aMUZE

Peak

by Anders Ericsson and Robert Pool

Ericsson makes expertise feel less mystical: small differences, repeated over time, become huge visible outcomes.

  • Books
  • Psychology
  • Education
  • Science

Yoga

A personal practice rooted in simplicity, patience, mindfulness, and the search for balance beyond the noise of daily life.

  • Activities
  • Yoga
  • Philosophy

Lion City

by Jeevan Vasagar

I read Lion City after travelling to Singapore, trying to understand the precision, ambition, pressure, and strangeness I felt there.

  • Books
  • History
  • Business

Rights, Royalties, And The Missing Ledger

The music industry has a transparency problem hiding inside its paperwork.

The music industry has always had a strange relationship with transparency. Everyone agrees artists should be paid fairly. Everyone agrees rights should be tracked. Everyone agrees ownership should be clear. Then the actual system appears and begins speaking in contracts, territories, platforms, percentages, intermediaries, and reports that feel like they were formatted by a haunted printer.

  • Music
  • Blockchain
  • Royalties
  • Rights
  • aMUZE

One Up On Wall Street

by Peter Lynch and John Rothchild

Lynch gave me permission to look at real life first, then verify brutally before an observation turns into a thesis.

  • Books
  • Finance
  • Business

Songs As Living Assets

A song can be culture, memory, expression, and also an object with rights attached.

Every song has a financial dimension, even when we prefer to talk about art in a pure voice while quietly checking streaming numbers. A song can carry emotion, memory, identity, and status, but it also has rights, ownership, usage, licensing, royalties, and value.

  • Music
  • Blockchain
  • Rights
  • Ownership
  • aMUZE

The Greatest Salesman in the World

by Og Mandino

Og Mandino wraps discipline in a parable so simple that I almost distrusted it at first. Then the book keeps tapping you on the shoulder, annoyingly calm and annoyingly right.

  • Books
  • Business

Fans Should Not Only Listen

The distance between artist and audience is a design problem.

Most fans are passive consumers. They listen, react, share, attend, buy, comment, and occasionally write alarming things online in capital letters. But they rarely participate in the creation of the music they love.

  • Music
  • Fans
  • Artists
  • Social
  • aMUZE

Machine Learning

by Ethem Alpaydin

Alpaydin's Machine Learning gave me a clean way into models, data, training, testing, and generalization without turning the entrance into a ritual sacrifice to notation.

  • Books
  • Science
  • AI

The $100 Startup

by Chris Guillebeau

A fun-to-read book that takes you on a journey around the world with inspiring stories of ingenious entrepreneurs.

  • Books
  • Business
  • Startups

Attack of the 50 Foot Blockchain

by David Gerard

Blockchain technology is often hailed as the cure-all solution to many serious problems. I'm delighted to have stumbled upon a book that reveals a layer beyond the glittering surface, and in a way that is informative and entertaining :)

  • Books
  • Finance

After Playlists Comes Personal Music

A playlist is already a confession. AI may let the song itself adapt.

Personal playlists are quietly revealing. They are not just collections of songs. They are emotional maps. People build them for running, heartbreak, focus, ego repair, late-night overthinking, gym delusion, and the occasional heroic walk to buy groceries.

  • Music
  • Personalization
  • AI
  • aMUZE
  • Future

The Lean Startup

by Eric Ries

Central to Ries's Lean Startup methodology is the Build-Measure-Learn loop, a continuous process of creating an MVP, measuring its success, and using that information to make informed decisions about what to build next. The goal is to quickly test ideas and receive feedback which provides with valuable insight when focusing on the correct metrics.

  • Books
  • Business
  • Startups

When Things Fall Apart

by Pema Chodron

I've had my fair share of exploring mindfulness and meditation, but meditation has always felt intangible and elusive. This book gives structure and concrete approaches to meditation, making it easier to understand.

  • Books
  • Philosophy

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

by Al Ries

It got me thinking about the difference between a fad and a trend in the marketing world.

  • Books
  • Business

Less Clutter Is The Product Law

Technology tends to disappear into smaller, friendlier surfaces.

One of the clearest product trends is less clutter. Technologies that used to live as separate objects slowly merge into one surface. Calculators, cameras, music players, maps, flashlights, notebooks, credit cards, voice recorders, and half of modern human attention have all been swallowed by the smartphone.

  • Product
  • Technology
  • Music
  • aMUZE
  • Creative Tools

Zero to One

by Peter Thiel

Thiel offers a good overview of the startup industry and its history. He touches on the dot-com and the green bubble, discussing how the hype and speculation around internet companies and renewable energy led to market crashes.

  • Books
  • Business
  • Startups

Seven Deadly Sins

by Corey Taylor

Corey Taylor doing what Corey Taylor does best: loud honesty, sharp edges, and an almost uncomfortable appetite for calling bullshit.

  • Books
  • Music

I Am Jackie Chan

by Jackie Chan

A few days ago, I was looking for a good movie to watch and remembered my childhood admiration of Jackie Chan. I looked for any new releases and stumbled upon his autobiography, "I Am Jackie Chan". Once I cracked it open I couldn't put it down.

  • Books
  • Memoir

I Am Ozzy

by Ozzy Osbourne

Just finished reading Ozzy Osbourne's autobiography. A great window into the tortuous life of a rock star. Ozzy grew up in very poor conditions. He couldn't find his place as a student and was a social misfit. But he went on to define the sound of heavy metal and become the Prince of Darkness and eventually a comical but very successful TV personality. A very honest and revealing memoir that doesn't stick to drug abuse and bragging.

  • Books
  • Music
  • Memoir

The Storyteller

by Dave Grohl

He sets an example of how being a rockstar doesn't have to come with excess and substance abuse - considering that his only known vice is drinking too much coffee.

  • Books
  • Music
  • Memoir

As a Man Thinketh

by James Allen

A tiny book with a heavy claim: guard the inner machinery, because sooner or later it leaks into everything else.

  • Books
  • Philosophy

The Book on Investing in Real Estate

by Brandon Turner

Practical real-estate machinery: numbers, leverage, risk, and the unglamorous operational side people usually skip when they fantasize about wealth.

  • Books
  • Business
  • Finance

Acres of Diamonds

by Russell Conwell

An old-school reminder that opportunity is often less exotic than we imagine. Look harder at the ground under your feet before chasing treasure elsewhere.

  • Books
  • Business

AI Music And The Anxious Musician

The fear is real. The conclusion does not have to be lazy.

When we discussed AI music with musicians, the reactions were not uniform. That was useful. Uniform reactions are usually a sign that nobody is paying attention or everyone is being polite, which is worse.

  • AI
  • Music
  • Artists
  • Creative Tools
  • aMUZE

The Dhandho Investor

by Mohnish Pabrai

Pabrai was another investing mentor discovery for me: calm, concentrated, asymmetric, and refreshingly allergic to unnecessary complexity.

  • Books
  • Finance
  • Business

Uncle Bob's Clean Code Videos

Some lessons land harder when the teacher has decades of scars and still loves the craft.

Robert C. Martin made software design feel like a serious craft: names, boundaries, discipline, tests, and responsibility toward the next human reading the code.

  • Engineering
  • Architecture
  • Education

Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway

by Susan Jeffers

A direct book about moving with fear instead of waiting for it to disappear. Useful precisely because it refuses the fantasy of perfect confidence.

  • Books
  • Psychology

1984

by George Orwell

I had been putting off reading this book for quite some time.

  • Books
  • Literature

The Three Ingredients Of Composition

Access, education, and active experimentation decide who gets to turn sound into form.

I keep coming back to three ingredients in music composition: access to instruments, some form of musical education, and active experimentation.

  • Music
  • Composition
  • Education
  • Creative Tools
  • aMUZE

aMUZE - Prototype

Award: $150,000

Award-winning iOS prototype that turns a whistle or hum into original music.

  • Projects
  • Startups
  • Business
  • AI
  • Music

21 Lessons for the 21st Century

by Yuval Noah Harari

Harari is useful when he slows down the panic and gives the century a table of contents. The problems are still enormous, but at least they stop arriving as one shapeless cloud.

  • Books

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

by Robert Pirsig

As an AI and music enthusiast, I've been wondering if generative AI will help us understand what quality is when it comes to music composition, and whether it will help improve it or lead to an increase in the musical equivalent of junk food.

  • Books
  • Philosophy

AI As The Final Frontier Of Composition

The curve does not ask whether everyone studied music. It asks what tool finally closes the distance.

The number of people able to compose music has been increasing for a very long time. Not smoothly, not politely, and not because history enjoys clean diagrams. It increases in waves whenever a new technology reduces a serious barrier.

  • AI
  • Music
  • Technology
  • aMUZE
  • Future

The Little Book That Beats the Market

by Joel Greenblatt

Greenblatt gave me a useful machine, but also made me wary of machines that sound too deterministic for something as messy as investing.

  • Books
  • Finance
  • Business

The Smartphone Is A Musical Instrument

A pocket device can now behave like a studio, a notebook, and a strange little orchestra.

People still talk about musical instruments as if the category is fixed. Piano. Guitar. Violin. Drums. The respectable objects. The ones that look good in black-and-white photographs next to someone with cheekbones and problems.

  • Music
  • Smartphones
  • Creative Tools
  • aMUZE
  • AI

Electricity Made Music A Mass Medium

The microphone did not create the magic. It amplified it.

Electricity did something strange to music. It did not invent the emotional force of sound. That force was already there, sitting in the human nervous system like an ancient button waiting to be pressed. Electricity simply made the button scalable.

  • Music
  • Technology
  • History
  • Media
  • aMUZE

The Little Book of Common Sense Investing

by John C. Bogle

Bogle is probably right in many ways, but emotionally I found indexing too unadventurous. I would rather investigate than surrender curiosity completely.

  • Books
  • Finance
  • Business

Music As Information Technology

Writing changed music because it changed memory.

Music history can be read as a history of information. That sounds cold at first, because music feels like the opposite of a spreadsheet. But the more I think about it, the more obvious it becomes: every major leap in music followed a major leap in how humans store, copy, transmit, or manipulate information.

  • Music
  • Information
  • Technology
  • aMUZE
  • History

The First Music Was Language

Before music was entertainment, it was communication.

Music did not begin with a piano, a guitar, a studio, or a person dramatically staring out of a rainy window because they have "a lot to say". It began much earlier, inside the human body, with breath, rhythm, pitch, and the strange ability to turn sound into meaning.

  • Music
  • AI
  • aMUZE
  • History
  • Language

Clean Code

by Robert C. Martin

Clean Code made programming feel like a craft of names, boundaries, and small decisions that either help the next human or quietly punish them.

  • Books
  • Engineering
  • Architecture

The Power of No

by James Altucher

Many believe that being a "yes" person is the way to go, but this is becoming increasingly impossible in today's fast-paced world.

  • Books
  • Philosophy

Physics Graduation: Learning To Think In Equations

A physics degree is not a personality, but it changes how abstraction feels.

Looking back at physics, mathematics, and the quiet confidence that comes from staying with abstract problems for long enough.

  • Science
  • Education
  • Life
  • Engineering

Man's Search for Meaning

by Viktor Frankl

A brutal and necessary meditation on suffering, dignity, and the human capacity to choose an inner posture when almost everything else is taken.

  • Books
  • Philosophy

Vim - IDE

A focused terminal workflow shaped into a fast, personal development environment.

  • Projects
  • Engineering
  • Tools

The Alchemist

by Paulo Coelho

A fable about following signs without becoming allergic to reality. Dreamy, simple, and somehow still hard to dismiss.

  • Books
  • Literature

On the Decay of the Art of Lying

by Mark Twain

Mark Twain being dangerous in a small format: funny, surgical, and annoyingly correct about the social machinery of truth.

  • Books
  • Literature

Moonwalking With Einstein

by Joshua Foer

A strange and practical tour through memory, attention, and deliberate practice. It makes remembering feel less mystical and more like engineering.

  • Books
  • Psychology

Politeia

by Plato

A dense confrontation with justice, order, education, and power. The kind of book that argues with you long after you close it.

  • Books
  • Philosophy

Faidon: Peri Psixis

by Plato

A philosophical farewell staged around death, the soul, and what it means to live as if your ideas matter until the end.

  • Books
  • Philosophy

Regenesis

by George Church

This book changed how I see the world! It is full of incredible inventions and breakthroughs in bioengineering.

  • Books
  • Science

The Selfish Gene

by Richard Dawkins

Evolution explained with ruthless elegance. It changes the scale of the conversation from individual intention to machinery much older than us.

  • Books
  • Science

The Pleasure of Finding Things Out

by Richard Feynman

Feynman was an exceptional physicist. He made significant contributions to the field of Quantum Electrodynamics - a theory that explores the behavior of light and matter at the subatomic scale.

  • Books
  • Science
  • Philosophy

Dog Training

A story about patience, learning, companionship, and the discipline of helping a very smart dog grow with care.

  • Activities
  • Dog Training

The Four Agreements

by Don Miguel Ruiz

The Four Agreements is built from simple rules, but not easy ones. It feels lightweight until you notice how much everyday noise they would remove if actually practiced.

  • Books
  • Philosophy

Awaken the Giant Within

by Anthony Robbins

Big Tony Robbins energy: intense, repetitive, theatrical, and still useful when you need to stop negotiating with your own inertia.

  • Books
  • Psychology

The Long Hard Road Out of Hell

by Marilyn Manson

A messy rock memoir with spectacle, damage, and myth-making everywhere. Not exactly clean living; definitely not boring.

  • Books
  • Music
  • Memoir

The Richest Man in Babylon

by George Clason

Personal finance dressed as ancient parable. The advice is simple because the hard part was never the arithmetic.

  • Books
  • Business
  • Finance

Scar Tissue

by Anthony Kiedis

Last book for 2022 - Scar Tissue by RHCP frontman Anthony Kiedis.

  • Books
  • Music
  • Memoir

The Society of Mind

by Marvin Minsky

It was very insightful to see his divide and conquer approach. He breaks down mental processes into a hierarchy of k-lines, nemes, polynemes, isonomes, and other agents that, as a whole, make up human intelligence.

  • Books
  • Science
  • AI
  • Psychology

The Millionaire Next Door

by Thomas J. Stanley

A useful antidote to fake-rich theater. Quiet accumulation, boring discipline, and the uncomfortable truth that wealth often does not look wealthy.

  • Books
  • Business
  • Finance

Secrets of the Millionaire Mind

by T. Harv Eker

A blunt mindset book about money scripts, ambition, and the strange psychological ceiling people carry around without noticing.

  • Books
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Psychology

Rich Dad Poor Dad

by Robert Kiyosaki

A provocative gateway book on assets, cashflow, and financial independence. Not gospel, but a useful shock to the default script.

  • Books
  • Business
  • Finance

Pickup Culture, Confidence, and the Industry of Desire

A dated, uncomfortable, and revealing self-development detour.

A look back at a controversial reading detour: confidence, insecurity, social courage, manipulation, and the strange industry built around desire.

  • Books
  • Psychology
  • Social

The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck

by Mark Manson

A sharp, vulgar reminder that attention is finite. The trick is not caring less; it is choosing more honestly what deserves your care.

  • Books
  • Psychology

The Mysterious Island

by Jules Verne

During a recent business coaching program, we were challenged to compete with pitch decks on solutions for a city ravaged by a hurricane. The event was intense. People came up with cutting-edge ideas involving robots, IoT smart infrastructures, drones etc.

  • Books
  • Literature

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

by J.K. Rowling

The one where the world gets darker, stranger, and more emotionally interesting. Time, fear, loyalty, and childhood magic starting to grow teeth.

  • Books
  • Literature

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

by J.K. Rowling

A mystery inside a school year, with danger hiding in walls and rumors. Still childish in rhythm, but the shadows are already arriving.

  • Books
  • Literature

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone

by J.K. Rowling

The doorway book: wonder, friendship, secret corridors, and the first addictive feeling that a whole hidden world might be waiting nearby.

  • Books
  • Literature

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

by J.K. Rowling

The series opens up violently here: spectacle, competition, politics, and the first real sense that childhood is no longer protecting anyone.

  • Books
  • Literature

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

by Mark Twain

Adventure, mischief, and the American boyhood myth machine in full motion. Funny, alive, and more complicated than its nostalgic surface.

  • Books
  • Literature

Paramithi Xoris Onoma

by Pinelopi Delta

A Greek childhood fable-world entry from Pinelopi Delta: simple surface, old emotional weather, and the kind of story that carries memory more than plot.

  • Books
  • Literature

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