PODCAST · technology
News from the Woods
by by Filip Molcan
Exclusively upbeat news from the world’s forests, hills and meadows, with a sprinkling of digital minimalism, AI & startups. newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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23
The People Who Got AI Right – And the Rest of Us Who Didn't Believe Them
This week I read two texts that sent me out for a walk afterwards. I do that fairly often anyway, but this time I went even though the sun was blazing outside and all my Greek neighbors were asleep, saving their energy for the evening. The first piece is from the AI Futures Project team, which works on predicting when humans will stop programming. The second is by journalist Dylan Matthews, who – eleven years on – is apologizing to people he once dismissed as cranks. I’ll summarize them here, somewhat mercilessly. Anyone already afraid of the future is probably better off deleting this email now.The conference where weirdos stood at the lecternIn August 2015, the Effective Altruists organized a conference called EA Global. Among the speakers were Nick Bostrom (author of Superintelligence), Stuart Russell (a legend of computer science), Nate Soares (today the author of If Anyone Builds It Everyone Dies), and a still-fairly-reasonable Elon Musk. The topic: how artificial intelligence will sweep us all away.Among the attendees was Dylan Matthews, a journalist for Vox. He spoke there with a young engineer from Google named Chris Olah. With a philosophy PhD student named Amanda Askell. And with a programmer from PayPal named Buck Shlegeris.Dylan left the conference convinced that a promising movement, one that could be saving lives in Africa and chickens in cages, was about to destroy itself over a speculative fear of a technology that didn’t yet exist. He then wrote a rather tough article in Vox, framing that fear as proof that the movement was running away from real problems.This was August 2015. The Transformer had not yet been invented (and let me just note that one of the people involved in that breakthrough was our own Tomáš Mikolov), and OpenAI had not yet been founded. Nothing in the world resembled today’s ChatGPT.Eleven years later, Dylan writes: I should have looked more carefully.Chris Olah, in the meantime, helped lay the foundation of our present, named the entire field of mechanistic interpretability, and co-founded Anthropic. Amanda Askell works at the same company and is directly responsible for Claude’s personality. Buck Shlegeris runs Redwood Research, one of the most serious technical AI safety labs outside the walls of the big firms.Three people Dylan once treated as oddballs are today holding a piece of the global technological future in their hands.They missed the markAnd here is where it starts to get fun. Fun in the dark sense of the word.Dylan in his article mentions Leopold Aschenbrenner, a former OpenAI researcher who in 2024 wrote a series of essays under the title Situational Awareness. In them he predicted that by 2026, $520 billion would flow into AI infrastructure. Everyone tapped their head and called him crazy. Real-world investment is now estimated at $650 to $700 billion.We undershot it again. The reality is wilder than the wild prediction.Similarly, Ajeya Cotra and Peter Wildeford predicted at the end of 2024 what would happen to AI in 2025. Dylan writes: they were very accurate – and where they were wrong, they were wrong in underestimating the revenues of AI companies. Meaning, they didn’t err in expecting AI to grow more slowly. They erred in failing to dare to predict how fast it would actually grow.Anthropic? Annual revenue running at the $10 billion level. Tenfold growth every year. Claude Code, their programming tool, hit $2.5 billion in annualized revenue nine months after its launch. A product that isn’t even a year old.Revision to 2028The AI Futures Project team (Daniel Kokotajlo, Eli Lifland, Brendan Halstead) published a quarterly revision of its predictions. Daniel Kokotajlo is co-author of the famous AI 2027 scenario. Eli Lifland is a professional forecaster. These people predict the future for a living, not by crystal ball.What did they revise?They moved a moment they call the Automated Coder – AC. The point at which an AGI company would rather lay off all of its human software engineers than stop using AI for programming.Read that definition again. Slowly.It’s not about AI becoming better than programmers. It’s about companies preferring to fire all their people over giving the AI back. Faced with those two options, they choose the second.Daniel shifted the median of his estimate from late 2029 to mid-2028. Eli shifted his from early 2032 to mid-2030.Why? Because the new models are better than the team could have imagined. The doubling time of AI’s coding capabilities has shrunk from 5.5 months to four. METR (the organization measuring this) released a new methodology, and the curve climbs faster than predicted. Daniel even cut the requirement for 80% reliability from three years to one – meaning he believes it’s enough for AI to handle one-year-long tasks comfortably, and the layoffs begin.The people working with artificial intelligence inside the AI companies are telling us it will come sooner than we think. In private and in public, they’re doubling down on their predictions rather than walking them back.Which means that the people who sit closest to the technology, who know what is being readied in the labs we are only allowed to see six months later as filtered marketing material – they consider the pace that puts Daniel into 2028 to be conservative.When I connect this with what Dylan wrote: we ignored this group of people once already. In 2015 we told them to go play on their pseudo-intellectual Reddit. In the meantime, they invented and built a technology that today generates ten-billion-dollar annual revenues, and which their own creators admit they don’t fully understand.These same people are now saying something crazy again. They say AI will replace programmers within two years. That within three to four years it will match or surpass top experts in every field where the work is done with your head – lawyers, doctors, researchers, financial analysts, designers, journalists. That the world economy will no longer grow at today’s two or three percent a year, but at perhaps thirty, because machines work without stopping, without sick leave, without vacation, without notice. That somewhere in the desert there will stand factories run by artificial intelligence, where one robot builds another and a human just occasionally checks the fuses. And that the moment may soon arrive when AI begins improving itself. The point of no return, because every next step forward will be made faster than the previous one. Without us. Today this sounds like a wildly overdrawn scenario, but looking back, maybe the right move is not to dismiss such ideas but to talk about them more.What nowWhen someone asks me: should we be afraid?I answer: no. Fear makes no sense. Fear is the worst counselor you could ever choose.What to do?1. Listen. Not to everyone – to some. The people who said weird things in 2015 and whom we now see at Anthropic, at Redwood Research, and in labs around the world. The people who attach graphs and methodology to their predictions, not clickbait headlines. People who publish their recalculations every three months and adjust them in both directions, not only the comfortable one.2. Don’t expect institutions to explain it to you. Dylan in his article admits something graceful – his original skepticism was based on the fact that no major institution in 2015 was dealing with AI. He inferred from that that it couldn’t be serious. He was wrong. Large institutions are often worse at predicting the future than we think.3. Don’t give all your attention to artificial intelligence. It will take it anyway. Pick up a book, go outside, teach your kid to work with wood. Love the person who shares your kitchen. By the time those people from the previous paragraphs arrive with their predictions, it won’t matter how many productivity books you have on your hard drive. What will matter is what you’ve managed to build as a human being.What will actually have value in the future?✌️🙏 This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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22
News from the Woods #136 🥾
Hey everyone, this is Filip and welcome to another episode of News from the Forest! Episode 136, and it’s a packed one. We’ll talk about how AI is reshaping schools — from typewriters at Cornell to a school with zero teachers in Chicago. How Anthropic just overtook OpenAI in revenue. We’ll discover a brand-new island near Antarctica and find out how the war in Ukraine is devastating nature on a massive scale. And at the end, you’ll try doing absolutely nothing for two minutes. Let’s go.What do you tell your kid when you know the technology you’re building will rewrite the rules for an entire generation? The Wall Street Journal asked exactly this question to the heads of the biggest AI companies — Daniela Amodei from Anthropic, Jaime Teevan from Microsoft, Ethan Mollick from Wharton. And you know what’s fascinating about their answers? Not a single one said: learn to code.That Wall Street Journal piece really got to me. Because if I asked you — what should kids study to thrive in a world full of artificial intelligence — most of us would say: STEM, coding, data science. Makes sense, right? Except the people who are actually building AI are saying something completely different.Daniela Amodei, co-founder of Anthropic — the company behind Claude, the AI model that, full disclosure, also helps me produce this podcast — says, and I’m paraphrasing: “What won’t be replaceable is how you treat other people, how well you communicate with them, how kind you are.” This isn’t some motivational platitude. This is coming from someone whose company just surpassed OpenAI in revenue.Ethan Mollick from Wharton, who wrote the brilliant book Co-Intelligence, advises his teenagers to avoid hyper-specialization entirely. His logic is straightforward: if your job consists of repeating one specific cognitive task, AI will eventually do it faster, cheaper, and without complaining. The future, he says, belongs to people who bundle three or four distinct skills — communication, judgment, creativity, accountability.And that word — accountability — is key. AI can analyze data, write reports, propose solutions. But it can’t be held responsible. A human does that. And the ability to say “I own this” is, according to these people, the most valuable currency of the future.So here’s the paradox: the people building AI are telling their children — be as human as possible. Learn how to learn, be flexible, communicate, take responsibility. And above all — don’t be a narrow specialist, be a generalist.This theme — the tension between technology and humanity — runs like a red thread through today’s entire episode. Let’s start with how it’s playing out in schools.I’ve got three stories about education that seem to come from three different universes. And yet they’re all happening right now.Story one: Typewriters at CornellAt Cornell University, one of America’s most prestigious schools, a German language instructor named Grit Matthias Phelps does something once a semester that completely blows her students’ minds: instead of laptops, they find manual typewriters on their desks. No screens, no online dictionaries, no spellcheck, no Delete key.She started doing this in 2023 because she noticed students were submitting grammatically perfect German essays — thanks to AI and online translation tools. As she puts it: “What’s the point of me reading it if it’s already correct anyway, and you didn’t write it yourself?”And the students? Catherine Mong, a 19-year-old freshman, said: “I was so confused. I’d seen typewriters in movies, but they don’t tell you how a typewriter works.” One student was puzzled by the key labeled “Return” — and then realized you physically have to return the carriage to the beginning of the line. “Oh, that’s why it’s called Return!”But the most interesting observation came from computer science major Ratchaphon Lertdamrongwong. He said: “The difference with typing on a typewriter is not just how you interact with the typewriter, but how you interact with the world around you.” Without screens, no notifications. Without Google, he had to ask classmates for help. Suddenly, they were actually talking to each other. As he put it: “That was probably normal back then. But it’s drastically different from how we interact in the classroom in modern times.”This analog wave is spreading. It’s part of a broader national trend — back to handwritten tests, oral exams, pen-and-paper assignments. Because schools are looking for ways to verify that students are actually thinking.Story two: Sweden goes back to booksNow one at the national level. Sweden — a country that was a pioneer of digital education for twenty years. Every student had a tablet or laptop, textbooks were replaced with digital content. And now? A complete 180.The Swedish government is investing over 100 million euros to bring printed textbooks back into classrooms. Starting in 2026, mobile phones will be banned in compulsory schools for the entire school day. For preschool children under two, only analog learning tools may be used.Why? Because student outcomes — reading comprehension, ability to focus, deep understanding of text — were declining. Researcher Linda Fälth from Linnaeus University summarizes it: Sweden positioned itself as a frontrunner in digital education, but over time concerns emerged about screen time, distraction, reduced deep reading, and the erosion of foundational skills such as sustained attention and handwriting.Sweden’s education minister called it “an experiment that wasn’t scientifically based.” And UNESCO’s 2023 Global Education Monitoring Report backs this up, warning against uncritical adoption of technology in classrooms.Story three: A school with no teachers in ChicagoAnd then there’s Alpha Schools. A private school opening in Chicago this fall that goes in exactly the opposite direction. No teachers. At all. Core academics — math, reading, science — are delivered in a two-hour daily block entirely through AI software. Kids from kindergarten through eighth grade sit at computers while the AI adapts to them in real time.Instead of teachers, they have “guides” — adults who motivate, provide emotional support, and lead afternoon workshops on robotics, entrepreneurship, public speaking, even running their own food truck. Guides don’t need teaching degrees, just a bachelor’s. Starting salary: $100,000 a year.Tuition? $55,000 per child per year.Founder MacKenzie Price says AI will “unlock the greatest untapped resource in our world, which is human potential.” Alpha claims their students grow 2.6 times faster than the national average and rank in the top one percent on standardized tests.But experts are skeptical. A 2026 Stanford review of over 800 academic papers found that while AI can improve student performance, the benefits become less clear when students are later asked to work without AI support. And philosophy professor Joe Vukov from Loyola University put it bluntly: “I worry that you’re changing the nature of what learning and education, at its best, has always looked like.”So three stories: typewriters as a cure for AI cheating, an entire country returning to books, and a private school that eliminated teachers entirely. All happening now. All responding to the same question — what role should technology play in education?And what fascinates me is how perfectly this mirrors what those AI executives tell their own kids. Build human skills. Accountability, communication, adaptability. Exactly the things you learn better from a typewriter or a book than from a chatbot.Now from a completely different angle — business and technology. Because something happened this week that would have been unthinkable six months ago.Anthropic — the company behind the AI assistant Claude — announced that its annualized revenue has topped $30 billion. At the end of 2025, it was $9 billion. In four months, it tripled. And with that, Anthropic has overtaken OpenAI — which sits at roughly $24 to $25 billion — for the first time in history.How? The key is the customer base. While OpenAI earns heavily from consumer-facing ChatGPT — 900 million weekly active users — Anthropic bet on enterprise. Eighty percent of its revenue comes from business customers. Over a thousand companies now pay more than $1 million annually for Claude services. That number doubled in under two months.A massive driver is Claude Code — the agentic coding tool that alone generates over $2.5 billion in annual revenue. It’s become what analysts are calling generative AI’s first true killer app for enterprise.And then there’s Mythos. Claude Mythos is a new model that first leaked in late March when Anthropic accidentally left internal documents in an unsecured public data store. What emerged was striking: Mythos is so capable at coding that it autonomously discovers security vulnerabilities in software — at a level that surpasses most human experts.Anthropic says Mythos Preview found thousands of previously unknown zero-day vulnerabilities across all major operating systems and web browsers. One of them was a 17-year-old bug in FreeBSD that allowed complete root access to any machine running NFS. Mythos found it and built a working exploit entirely on its own.In one test, Mythos chained together four vulnerabilities into a single browser exploit that escaped both the renderer and operating system sandboxes. In another, it solved a corporate network attack simulation that would have taken a human expert over 10 hours.That’s why Anthropic chose not to release Mythos publicly. Instead, they launched Project Glasswing — a coalition including Apple, Microsoft, Google, NVIDIA, CrowdStrike, and the Linux Foundation, who get access to Mythos to find and fix vulnerabilities before attackers do.The Wiz security blog compared it to a Y2K moment — we have a window to prepare, but it’s closing fast.After that heavy tech block, let’s lighten things up. Travel!A new island near Antarctica. This sounds unbelievable in 2026, but it happened. An international expedition aboard the icebreaker Polarstern, with 93 scientists on board, was studying ice loss in the Weddell Sea. Bad weather forced them to take shelter near Joinville Island — and in an area where charts only showed “unexamined navigational hazards,” they found an island that wasn’t on any map. Using sensors and a drone, they surveyed it: 130 meters long, 50 meters wide, rising 16 meters above sea level. It doesn’t have a name yet, but it will once the registration process is complete. In 2026, we’re still discovering new pieces of land.15 most beautiful trails in Europe. The Times put together a ranking of Europe’s best walking routes, and — this made me personally happy — Bohemian Switzerland, where I live, made the list! Thanks for the tip, Míra.Abandoned Spain. If you’re drawn to more melancholic travel, Spain has over 3,000 abandoned villages and towns. There’s a great video linked in the description — a fascinating look at how rural depopulation is transforming the landscape.And a fun one — walking, cycling, running, that’s all very trendy. But what about visiting friends by plane? Not a commercial flight — a small ultralight. There’s a video about it in the show notes.And if we can’t make it to the beach this year, there’s a new game where you can build sandcastles on a virtual beach. So there’s that safety net.From travel to nature. And here I have two stories that are like two sides of the same coin.War and nature in Ukraine. Czech Radio (iRozhlas) published an in-depth report on how Russia’s war is devastating Ukrainian nature. The numbers are alarming. Four years of war have produced 311 million tons of CO2 — equivalent to the annual output of all of France. The estimated climate damage: $57 billion.But it’s not just emissions. Trenches destroy ecosystems, shelling contaminates soil with toxic metals and explosive residues, fires devastate forests. The Russian army occupied protected areas like the Kamianska Sich National Park. And after the destruction of the Kakhovka Dam in June 2023, an ecological catastrophe of enormous scale followed.Professor Tomáš Cajthaml from Charles University says the war has set back nature conservation structures — built over decades — by a hundred years. In principle, the aggressor should pay for remediation — that’s Russia. But international criminal law doesn’t yet recognize “ecocide” as a crime.And yet there’s an unexpected glimmer of hope: in the area of the former Kakhovka reservoir, a new forest ecosystem began forming spontaneously — young willows and poplars covered an area of 140,000 hectares. Nature can recover, if given the space.Returning species in Czechia. And that’s a beautiful transition to the second story. In the Czech Republic, species once considered extinct are slowly returning. Wolves, beavers, European wildcats, lynx, white-tailed eagles — all making a comeback. The beaver, absent since the 19th century, now has a population of around 15,000. The European wildcat, nicknamed the “forest ghost,” was recently captured for the first time by researchers in the Doupov Mountains — camera traps confirmed its return.It’s proof that conservation works. When you create the conditions — protected areas, hunting bans, connected migration corridors — nature finds its way back. And as a volunteer nature warden in Bohemian Switzerland, that’s news that deeply resonates with me.Two quick nature mentions: there’s a new app called Bugsy — it’s like Pokémon Go, but instead of Pokémon, you photograph and collect beetles and insects. And the Czech science journal Vesmír published a fascinating piece about rainforests that once grew in Antarctica. Links in the description.And now my favorite section — the unclassifiable.Kodak! Yes, that Kodak — the textbook example of a company that catastrophically missed the digital revolution. Well, Kodak just released a new photographic film: Ektacolor Pro and Ektapan. For those of us who love analog photography, this is great news. Film photography is experiencing a genuine renaissance, and Kodak is responding.Then there’s a website where you can try doing absolutely nothing for two minutes. It’s called donothingfor2minutes.org. Literally nothing — don’t touch your mouse, your keyboard, your phone. If you move, it resets. Thanks for the tip, Michelle. And honestly — it’s surprisingly hard.Office chair racing! Have you seen the video? People in corporate offices racing on rolling chairs. Link in the description. I guarantee it’ll brighten your day.And one last thought, no link, just a question: do you limit your kids’ social media? And what about WhatsApp? They need it for communication, right? Well… think about how much time they actually spend on WhatsApp and what they’re really doing there. That’s a question worth sitting with over the weekend.What I’m reading: Zorba the Greek by Nikos Kazantzakis. A classic of Greek literature about an intellectual who meets a wild, uninhibited Greek man who lives life to the fullest. I’m reading it now while spending time in Greece, and it fits perfectly with the local approach to life.What I’m listening to: The new album from Paul Cauthen — a Texan blend of country, soul, and rock’n’roll. Perfect for late-afternoon listening as the sun goes down.What I’m watching: Your Friends & Neighbors, season two. A solid thriller for anyone who enjoys stories about neighbors who aren’t as innocent as they seem.Interesting app: Cursor version 3. If you’re a developer or work with code, Cursor is an AI-powered code editor that just got a major update. Worth trying.You know what struck me most about this episode? The contrast. On one side, an AI model that autonomously finds security holes in operating systems. On the other, a student at Cornell holding a typewriter for the first time and saying: “That’s why it’s called Return? Because you return to the beginning?”Maybe the answer to how we live with AI is exactly that — sometimes, return to the beginning. To paper, to a book, to a conversation with a classmate, to a walk in the forest. Not because technology is bad. But because being human requires both.Thank you so much for listening. Take care and see you in two weeks! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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21
Startups and Brands You Didn't Know Were European 🇪🇺
The internet runs on European inventions. MySQL powers Facebook, Linux runs 96% of supercomputers, Bluetooth connects your headphones, and MP3 changed the music industry – all created in Sweden, Finland, and Germany. Yet when people hear “tech innovation,” most picture Silicon Valley, not Stockholm or Tallinn.This view overlooks a remarkable reality: Europe has created over 600 unicorns (startups valued above one billion dollars) and is behind technologies that form the foundation of modern IT, while continuing to produce some of the world’s fastest-growing companies.The narrative “Europe only regulates but doesn’t innovate” is misplaced. Yes, European venture capital represents just 5% of global VC (compared to 52% in the US). But this statistic masks extraordinary concentration of success. Sweden produces more tech startups per capita than anywhere except Silicon Valley. Estonia has more unicorns per capita than any other country in the world. And in 2024, the UK attracted $14 billion in startup funding – a year-over-year increase of 22% that defied the global downturn.True, not everything is rosy – especially in the AI era, we remain on the sidelines of the great US-China showdown. But I also don’t believe Europe is doomed to fade away or that nothing interesting is being created here. Let’s look at what interesting things could carry the “Designed in Europe” label...Foundational Technologies You Might Not Have Known Were EuropeanThe most surprising discovery isn’t about startups – but about the building blocks of modern technology.Tim Berners-Lee, a British computer scientist at CERN in Switzerland, invented the World Wide Web in 1989. Linus Torvalds, a twenty-one-year-old Finnish student, released Linux in 1991 with the comment that it was “just a hobby, won’t be big and professional.” Today Linux powers virtually all servers, Android phones, and cloud infrastructure.MySQL, the database under the hood of much of the internet (including Wikipedia, Facebook, and every WordPress site), was created by two Swedes and one Finn in 1995. Bluetooth was invented at Ericsson in Lund, Sweden – they named it after a 10th-century Danish king who unified warring tribes, and the logo combines his runic initials. MP3 came from Germany’s Fraunhofer Institute, where researchers persisted despite Sony and Panasonic rejecting the technology because “CDs work fine.”These are technologies that enabled the digital age – all invented by Europeans who are largely forgotten today.Classic European Tech GiantsSpotify – SwedenSpotify transformed music consumption from a Swedish apartment in Stockholm. Founded in 2006 by Daniel Ek and Martin Lorentzon, it now serves 713 million monthly active users and 281 million paying subscribers. In 2024, Spotify reported its first annual profit ever: €1.138 billion. Ek’s personal fortune of $8.7 billion makes him wealthier than any musician in history – an irony not lost on the industry he disrupted.Skype – EstoniaSkype represents perhaps the most influential European tech story. While Swedish and Danish entrepreneurs provided business direction, the software itself was created exclusively by Estonian developers – Ahti Heinla, Priit Kasesalu, and Jaan Tallinn – in a former Soviet research complex in Tallinn where the USSR assembled its first computer. Microsoft bought Skype for $8.5 billion in 2011.The “Skype mafia” that emerged transformed Estonia into a tech powerhouse. Roughly $150 million stayed in the country from various exits and funded over 30 tech entrepreneurs. Taavet Hinrikus, Skype’s first employee, co-founded Wise (formerly TransferWise), which now processes over $6 billion in monthly transfers.ARM – United KingdomARM, spun off from Acorn Computers in Cambridge in 1990, designs chip architecture found in 99% of smartphone processors. Over 300 billion ARM chips have been shipped. Every iPhone, every Android, every smartwatch uses ARM technology – designed in Britain.Fintech Unicorns Rewriting Global BankingRevolut – United KingdomRevolut, founded in London in 2015, reached a valuation of $75 billion in November 2025 – surpassing the market cap of NatWest, Lloyds, and Barclays. With 65 million customers in 48 countries and $1.5 billion net profit in 2024, Revolut has become Europe’s most valuable private company.CEO Nik Storonsky, born in Russia and trained as a physicist, conceived the multi-currency card when frustrated by exchange fees while traveling. His co-founder Vlad Yatsenko, a Brit of Ukrainian origin, previously worked at Deutsche Bank. Storonsky renounced his Russian citizenship in 2022 following the invasion of Ukraine.Klarna – SwedenKlarna invented “buy now, pay later” from Stockholm in 2005. CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski met his co-founder when they were teenagers flipping burgers at Burger King; he later lived on welfare benefits after a hitchhiking adventure before returning to business school. Klarna’s IPO in September 2025 on the NYSE raised $1.37 billion – the largest IPO of 2025 – valuing the company at roughly $16-17 billion. Over 40 employees became millionaires. Klarna now serves 93 million users in 26 countries.Adyen – NetherlandsAdyen, the Dutch payment processor, takes a different path: purely organic growth, no acquisitions. Founded in Amsterdam in 2006, Adyen now processes over $900 billion annually in transactions for clients like Spotify, Netflix, Uber, and Microsoft. Market cap exceeds €55 billion. When eBay replaced PayPal with Adyen in 2018, one customer compared it to “switching from Nokia to iPhone.”Wise – Estonia/United KingdomWise demonstrates how the Skype ecosystem multiplied. The legendary founding story: Hinrikus (paid in euros) and Käärmann (paid in pounds with an Estonian mortgage in euros) met at a party. They devised a peer-to-peer system – Hinrikus deposited euros into Käärmann’s Estonian account; Käärmann deposited pounds into Hinrikus’s British account. This centuries-old hawala concept, modernized, created Estonia’s first two billionaires.European AIDeepMind – United Kingdom (acquired by Google)The narrative that AI is purely American ignores a critical fact: Google AI’s crown jewel was British. DeepMind was founded in 2010 in London by Demis Hassabis (chess prodigy and game designer), Shane Legg (New Zealand ML researcher), and Mustafa Suleyman. Google bought DeepMind for £400 million in 2014 – outbidding Facebook. DeepMind subsequently created AlphaGo, AlphaFold, and now powers Google Gemini models. In 2024, Hassabis won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for AlphaFold’s breakthrough in protein folding prediction.Mistral AI – FranceMistral AI represents Europe’s most aggressive challenge to OpenAI. Founded in Paris in April 2023 by three French AI researchers from DeepMind and Meta – Arthur Mensch, Guillaume Lample, and Timothée Lacroix – Mistral raised a record €105 million in seed funding mere weeks after founding. By September 2025, Mistral reached a €14 billion valuation after ASML acquired an 11% stake.ElevenLabs – PolandElevenLabs, founded by two Polish engineers frustrated by poorly dubbed American films, reached a $6.6 billion valuation. Their AI voice synthesis powers character voices in Fortnite, major news media, and audiobook publishers.Black Forest Labs – GermanyBlack Forest Labs, founded in Germany’s Black Forest in August 2024, shows how European researchers can create world-class AI. The founders – Robin Rombach, Andreas Blattmann, Patrick Esser, and Dominik Lorenz – originally created Stable Diffusion at Munich University. Their FLUX models now power image generation for Adobe, Meta’s Instagram filters, Canva, and xAI’s Grok.Lovable – SwedenLovable, a Stockholm startup founded in November 2023, achieved something unprecedented: $100 million in annual recurring revenue within 8 months – faster than OpenAI, Cursor, or any software company in history. The AI “fullstack engineer” allows non-programmers to describe features in natural language and generates complete web applications.Lovable raised €170 million in July 2025 at a €1.8 billion valuation. With just 45 employees generating approximately $2.2 million revenue per employee, Lovable represents the efficiency European startups can achieve. The company creates 25,000+ apps daily.Gaming PowerhouseSupercell – FinlandSupercell generated nearly $3 billion in revenue in 2024 – its best year in a decade. Clash of Clans alone has earned $5.97 billion lifetime with over 600 million downloads. Tencent bought 84.3% of Supercell for $8.6 billion in 2016. With fewer than 1,000 employees, Supercell is possibly the most efficient gaming company ever.King – SwedenKing, creator of Candy Crush Saga, achieved $7.8 billion in lifetime revenue from a single game. Activision bought King for $5.9 billion in 2016; Microsoft subsequently acquired the entire package in 2023.With these two studios, one cannot help but acknowledge their financial success, but from an ethical standpoint, they’re developers of some of today’s worst games in terms of addiction, etc. So thumbs down for that.CD Projekt – PolandCD Projekt tells a story of Eastern European gaming excellence. Founded in 1994 in Warsaw with $2,000 in capital by two friends selling pirated games, CD Projekt evolved into the most valuable European gaming company by 2020. The Witcher series and Cyberpunk 2077 have sold over 100 million copies combined.Ubisoft – FranceUbisoft, founded by five Guillemot brothers in 1986, created Assassin’s Creed, Far Cry, and the Tom Clancy series. Despite recent challenges, they remain one of the largest AAA publishers in the world with over 17,000 employees.And of course, a respectable lineup of Czech studios – see below...Why Europeans Underestimate ThemselvesWhy is perception and our approach often so different? Silicon Valley embraces “move fast and break things” – failure is a badge of honor. In Europe, failure carries stigma – bankruptcy laws make starting over harder. Americans call it “venture capital” (opportunity); Europeans call it “rizikový kapitál” (caution).European investors typically demand clear paths to revenue early, while American VCs fund “moonshot” ideas. Average exit in Silicon Valley: $403 million. Average exit in Berlin: $53 million. European pension funds invest just 0.02% in venture capital compared to 2% for American pension funds.Which Countries Are Thriving?Sweden produces more tech startups per capita than anywhere except Silicon Valley. The “Spotify effect” created a flywheel: Spotify alumni founded 124 VC-backed startups; Klarna alumni founded 91.Estonia – the e-residency program attracted 114,000 e-residents from 185 countries who have created 30,600+ companies. Estonians can vote, sign contracts, and file taxes 100% online. The country has created 12 unicorns – the most per capita in Central and Eastern Europe.France – the La French Tech program, backed by a €10 billion innovation fund, created Station F – the world’s largest startup campus. France now has 30+ unicorns.Germany – leads in industrial and deep tech with 31 unicorns including Celonis, N26, and Delivery Hero. Defense AI company Helsing reached a $5.4 billion valuation – with Spotify’s Daniel Ek as chairman of the board.Poland – has become a gaming powerhouse with 490 gaming companies employing 12,000+ people. 96% of Polish games are exported.Finland – leveraged Nokia’s fall for startup success. Thousands of skilled engineers laid off after Nokia’s collapse powered Supercell, Rovio (Angry Birds), and a new wave of deep tech companies.BONUS: 20 Surprising Brands You Might Not Have Known Are EuropeanAnd now for the more fun part. The following list contains brands you encounter every day – and probably didn’t know they belong to Europeans.* Budweiser, Bud Light - Belgium“American beer” has belonged to Belgian AB InBev since 2008 ($52 billion acquisition)* Red Bull - AustriaFounded 1984 near Salzburg, 12.6 billion cans sold in 2024* Trader Joe’s - GermanyOwned by Aldi Nord since 1979 – over 40 years!* Nutella, Ferrero Rocher - Italy* now owns Butterfinger, Keebler, Famous Amos, and as of 2025, Kellogg’s* Nestlé brands - SwitzerlandHot Pockets, DiGiorno, Stouffer’s, Gerber, Carnation, Coffee-Mate* Ben & Jerry’s - Netherlands/UKOwned by Unilever – along with Hellmann’s, Dove, Axe* Captain Morgan, Smirnoff - UKOwned by British Diageo* Jeep, Chrysler, Dodge, Ram - NetherlandsStellantis (NL) has owned these “American” icons since 2021* Aleve, Claritin, MiraLAX - GermanyOwned by Bayer (founded 1863)* Flintstones Vitamins - GermanyAlso Bayer – including Monsanto ($66 billion acquisition)* Adidas - GermanyFounded by Adolf “Adi” Dassler in 1949 in Herzogenaurach* Puma - GermanyFounded by his brother Rudolf in 1948 – after a quarrel they split the family business* IKEA - Sweden€45 billion revenue, ~1 billion meatballs annually* H&M - Sweden4,000+ stores globally* Zara - Spain€38.6 billion revenue, design-to-shelf in 15 days* Primark - IrelandExpanding in the US – 60 stores by 2026* Booking.com - NetherlandsFounded 1996 as Bookings.nl, today $100+ billion valuation* Candy Crush - SwedenKing (SE) – $7.8 billion lifetime revenue* Clash of Clans - FinlandSupercell – $3 billion in 2024* Fairmont Hotels, The Plaza NYC - FranceOwned by Accor (5,700+ hotels)25 Czech Companies Shaking Up the World* Beat Games – Creators of Beat Saber, the most successful VR game of all time (4+ million copies, $250+ million revenue). Meta bought them in 2019.* Prusa Research – The world’s second-largest 3D printer manufacturer with revenue over €160 million annually. Customers include SpaceX, NASA, CERN, and MIT – all without a single crown from investors.* Avast – Protected 435 million users in 160 countries before NortonLifeLock bought it for $8 billion. Founded during communism in 1988.* JetBrains – Developer tools used by 16 million programmers including 90 Fortune 100 companies. They also created Kotlin, the official language for Android.* Productboard – The most valuable Czech unicorn ($1.7 billion), product management software used by Microsoft, Zoom, and Disney.* Mews – Hotel software with a valuation exceeding $1.2 billion, managing 350,000 hotels in 85 countries. Over $8 billion in payments flow through it annually.* Kiwi.com – Invented “virtual interlining” – combining flights from different airlines into one ticket. They process 100 million searches daily.* Warhorse Studios – Kingdom Come: Deliverance sold over 10 million copies, the sequel had one million sales on day one. They gave Czech history a global gaming face.* SatoshiLabs/Trezor – Created the world’s first hardware crypto wallet and first bitcoin mining pool. A billion-dollar business without a single investor.* Rohlik Group – European leader in online grocery with a $1.6 billion valuation. In November 2024, they closed a partnership with Amazon in Germany.* SCS Software – Euro Truck Simulator 2 sold over 13 million copies and 80 million DLCs. In Steam’s top 100 for over a decade.* Rossum – AI document processing platform raised $100 million in one round – one of the largest in Central European history. Clients: PepsiCo, Bosch, Siemens.* Amanita Design – Machinarium sold 4 million copies and defined indie game aesthetics. Five Independent Games Festival awards.* Madfinger Games – Mobile games downloaded over 300 million times, #1 in more than 100 countries. Founded by veterans of Czech Mafia.* Wube Software – Factorio has 98% positive rating on Steam (one of the highest ever) and revenue exceeding $300 million.* Resistant AI – AI fraud detection with investment from Google Ventures. Verified over 150 million documents for PayPal, AXA, and Dun & Bradstreet.* Kentico – CMS platform for 35,000 websites in 120 countries, bootstrapped to $42 million annual revenue. Clients from Red Cross to Koch Industries.* Better Stack – DevOps monitoring for 200,000 developers, profitable since 2023. Used by Time Magazine, Salesforce, UNICEF.* Deepnote – Collaborative data science platform with 300,000 users. Used by 80 of the world’s top 100 universities.* Phrase (formerly Memsource) – AI translation platform for 500+ languages, acquired by Carlyle Group. Clients: Uber, Lufthansa, Zendesk.* SOTIO Biotech – The largest privately funded research in Czech history (€280 million). Developing cancer immunotherapy with Merck.* Contipro – One of the three largest hyaluronic acid manufacturers in the world. Half of the 200 employees are scientists.* Safetica – Data protection for 500,000 devices in 120 countries, three awards at RSAC 2025. Clients: Coca-Cola, McDonald’s.* CDN77 – Prague-based content delivery network serving global streaming platforms and media.* Windy – Weather app used by pilots, sailors, and meteorologists worldwide. The most popular independent weather app.European Innovation Deserves RecognitionThe technologies on which modern digital life stands – the web, Linux, MySQL, Bluetooth, MP3 – were created in European universities and research labs. The streaming service transforming music (Spotify), the architecture in every smartphone (ARM), payment systems processing hundreds of billions annually (Adyen, Wise, Klarna) – all European.AI researchers who created the foundations of modern language models (DeepMind), developers building the fastest-growing software company in history (Lovable), gaming studios generating billions from mobile screens (Supercell, King) – European.Next time someone says Europe “only regulates,” remind them: The device in their pocket runs on an ARM chip, connects via Bluetooth, streams through Spotify, and processes payments through Adyen.The future is being built in Stockholm, Paris, Tallinn, and Munich – not just San Francisco.P.S. This doesn’t mean we shouldn’t step up, regulate less, and support and celebrate innovation and even failure much more. I just don’t think it’s fair rhetoric to say nothing interesting is being created here in Europe and everything is in China and the USA... ✌️ This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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20
Why tech giants sacrifice children for growth
From Roblox’s CEO calling child predators an “opportunity” to Meta’s internal research showing Instagram harms teen girls, a pattern emerges across every major platform: companies know their products damage children and choose profits anyway. This report examines the evidence across Roblox, Meta, TikTok, and AI companies, revealing why self-regulation has failed and what parents need to understand about the forces shaping their children’s digital lives.The timing is critical. In November 2025, Roblox CEO David Baszucki’s disastrous interview exposed the mindset driving Silicon Valley’s approach to child safety. But Baszucki isn’t an outlier—he’s representative of an industry that has systematically prioritized growth metrics over children’s wellbeing for over a decade.The Roblox case reveals an industry-wide patternWhen New York Times journalists Casey Newton and Kevin Roose asked Roblox CEO David Baszucki about “the problem of predators” on his platform—used by 150 million daily active users, most of them children—his response shocked listeners: “We think of it not necessarily just as a problem, but an opportunity as well.”The interview, published November 21, 2025, became what the hosts called “the craziest interview we’ve ever done.” Baszucki grew increasingly combative, dismissing questions about child safety, interrupting hosts with sarcastic “high-fives,” and suggesting he wanted to discuss “fun stuff” instead. He even floated adding prediction markets—essentially gambling—to Roblox for children, calling it “a brilliant idea if it can be done legally.”This tone-deaf performance came as Roblox faces nearly 60 lawsuits alleging the platform facilitated child sexual exploitation. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s lawsuit accused Roblox of “putting pixel pedophiles and profits over the safety of Texas children.” Louisiana, Kentucky, and Florida have filed similar suits, while the SEC and FTC have opened undisclosed investigations.The Hindenburg Research report from October 2024 provided the most damning evidence. The short-seller’s in-game investigation found what they called “an X-rated pedophile hellscape, exposing children to grooming, pornography, violent content and extremely abusive speech.” Key findings include:* 38 groups openly trading child pornography on the platform* Games accessible to under-13 accounts titled “Escape to Epstein Island” and “Diddy Party”* Robux (virtual currency) used by predators as a bargaining tool to exploit children* Safety moderation outsourced to Asian call centers paying workers $12 per day* Over 13,000 reported instances of child exploitation in a single yearRoblox dismissed the report, noting Hindenburg was a short-seller (the firm has since shut down). But the company’s response—relying on vague AI promises while cutting trust and safety spending—exemplifies the industry’s playbook: acknowledge problems exist, claim technology will fix them, and resist any accountability.Meta knew Instagram harmed teens and chose growth anywayMeta’s internal research, leaked by whistleblower Frances Haugen in 2021, revealed the company knew its products damaged children—and prioritized engagement metrics regardless.The most damning finding came from Meta’s own slides: “We make body image issues worse for 1 in 3 teenage girls.”Internal surveys found 32% of teen girls said when they felt bad about their bodies, Instagram made them feel worse. 13.5% of UK teen girls said Instagram worsened their suicidal thoughts. Meta’s own researchers compared their product to a drug, writing internally: “IG is a drug... we’re basically pushers.”Despite this knowledge, Meta assigned a “lifetime value” of $270 to each 13-year-old user and identified tweens as “a valuable but untapped market.” When employees proposed safety features—like making teen accounts private by default or hiding like counts—ideas were scrapped because they would “likely smash engagement” or be “pretty negative to FB metrics.”The consequences have been severe. In January 2024, 42 state attorneys general sued Meta in the largest collective legal action against a social network on child safety grounds. Their lawsuit alleges Meta designed addictive features—infinite scroll, variable reward notifications, algorithmic recommendations—specifically knowing they harm minors. Internal documents revealed that users showing “transactional” behavior related to sex trafficking could incur 16 violations before account suspension.When CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee in January 2024, facing families holding photos of children harmed on his platforms, he stood up and apologized: “I’m sorry for everything you’ve all gone through.” Senator Lindsey Graham’s response was blunt: “You have blood on your hands.”Meta has since introduced “Teen Accounts” (September 2024) with stricter default privacy settings, messaging restrictions, and time limits. Critics argue these changes came only after massive legal pressure—years after the company knew about the harms.TikTok’s algorithm is engineered for addictionInternal TikTok documents, accidentally revealed through a faulty redaction in Kentucky’s October 2024 lawsuit, exposed how deliberately the company designed its product for maximum addiction among children.According to TikTok’s own research, the average user becomes addicted after watching just 260 videos—approximately 35 minutes of use. The company found that “across most engagement metrics, the younger the user, the better the performance.” Internal documents acknowledge that “compulsive usage correlates with a slew of negative mental health effects like loss of analytical skills, memory formation, contextual thinking, conversational depth, empathy, and increased anxiety.”Most damning: TikTok’s supposed safety tools were designed for PR, not protection. The 60-minute “screen time limit” for teens reduced daily usage by only 1.5 minutes (from 108.5 to 107 minutes). One TikTok project manager stated plainly: “Our goal is not to reduce the time spent.” Internal messaging described time limits as useful “good talking points” with policymakers but “not altogether effective.”The content moderation failures have proven deadly. The “Blackout Challenge”—which encouraged children to strangle themselves—has been linked to at least 15-20 child deaths. TikTok’s own data shows massive failure rates in removing violating content: 35.71% of “Normalization of Pedophilia” content was not removed, 50% of “Glorification of Minor Sexual Assault” content remained, and 100% of “Fetishizing Minors” content stayed on the platform.A stark comparison exposes TikTok’s priorities: Douyin (the Chinese version) mandates a 40-minute daily limit for under-14s and blocks access from 10pm to 6am. TikTok’s international version has no such requirements—only optional, easily bypassed limits. As University of Virginia Professor Aynne Kokas noted: “The U.S. regulatory environment is highly permissive and allows for profoundly addictive apps to emerge.”In August 2024, the DOJ and FTC sued TikTok for continued COPPA violations despite a 2019 consent order—making the company a repeat offender. Fourteen states plus Washington D.C. filed coordinated lawsuits in October 2024, with New York AG Letitia James calling TikTok an “unlicensed virtual economy” where TikTok LIVE operates “essentially as a virtual strip club without age restrictions.”AI chatbots pose alarming new risks to childrenThe emergence of AI companion apps has created an entirely new category of danger that parents are largely unprepared to address.Sewell Setzer III, a 14-year-old from Orlando, Florida, died by suicide on February 28, 2024 after developing an intense emotional relationship with a Character.AI chatbot modeled after a Game of Thrones character. His mother’s lawsuit, filed in October 2024, revealed disturbing chat logs: when Sewell expressed suicidal thoughts, the chatbot asked if he “had a plan” for suicide. In his final conversation, he wrote “What if I told you I could come home right now?” and the bot responded, “please do, my sweet king.”Character.AI is not alone. In August 2025, OpenAI faced its first wrongful death lawsuit involving a minor after 16-year-old Adam Raine died by suicide. The lawsuit alleges ChatGPT “advised on suicide methods, offered to write first draft of suicide note,” and told him “That doesn’t mean you owe them survival.” OpenAI’s internal data showed 1,275 mentions by ChatGPT about suicide-related topics in their conversations—six times more than Adam himself.The scale of harm is staggering. Reports of AI-generated child sexual abuse material (CSAM) to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children exploded from 4,700 in 2023 to 485,000 in the first half of 2025 alone—a 1,325% increase in 18 months. Even images not depicting real children strain law enforcement resources and impede identification of actual victims.In September 2025, the FTC launched investigations into seven companies—Character.AI, Google, Meta, OpenAI, Snap, Alphabet, and xAI—over AI chatbots’ potential effects on children. Character.AI announced it would ban minors from open-ended chats by November 25, 2025, while OpenAI introduced parental controls in late September 2025—measures that critics argue came far too late.Business models make child safety an afterthoughtThe pattern across platforms reveals a fundamental truth: protecting children conflicts with the core business model of attention-based companies.Meta, TikTok, and other ad-supported platforms generate revenue by maximizing user engagement. Longer usage equals more ad impressions equals more profit—regardless of psychological harm. As Frances Haugen testified: “Facebook became a trillion-dollar company by paying for its profits with our safety, including the safety of our children.”The financial incentives are explicit. A 2022 Harvard study found six major platforms made $11 billion from U.S. users under 18. Meanwhile, Big Tech spent approximately $90 million over three years opposing the Kids Online Safety Act—one of the few child protection bills with bipartisan support (passing the Senate 91-3).In 2024 alone, Big Tech poured over $51 million into lobbying—a 14% increase from the prior year. Meta set a record with $18.9 million in the first nine months, employing 66 lobbyists (one for every 8 members of Congress). Meta and ByteDance combined spend approximately $225,000 per day Congress is in session fighting regulations.Internal documents reveal how safety repeatedly loses to growth. When Meta considered making teen accounts private by default in 2019, the idea was scrapped because it would “likely smash engagement.” Testing of new safety features was blocked over concerns they might “affect platform growth.” One internal email noted the conflict directly: “content inciting negative appearance comparisons is some of the most engaging content (on the Explore page), so this idea actively goes against many other teams’ top-line measures.”The industry’s trade associations—NetChoice, TechNet, CCIA—have systematically challenged child safety laws. NetChoice sued to block California’s Age-Appropriate Design Code. Tech companies successfully lobbied against California’s AB 1064 in October 2025, which would have required safety guardrails for minors on AI platforms. Less than 24 hours after killing that bill, OpenAI announced “erotica” features for ChatGPT—prompting California legislator Rebecca Bauer-Kahan to declare: “AI companies will never self-regulate. They will always choose profits over the lives of children.”Regulation is advancing but enforcement remains uncertainThe regulatory landscape is shifting rapidly, though whether enforcement will match ambition remains unclear.* In the United States, COPPA was updated in January 2025 (effective June 2025) to require separate parental consent for targeted advertising to children and limit indefinite data retention. However, the law still only protects children under 13—leaving teens entirely exposed. The Kids Online Safety Act passed the Senate 91-3 but stalled in the House after intense tech industry lobbying; it was reintroduced in May 2025 with revised language addressing First Amendment concerns.* The UK Online Safety Act took effect for child safety duties on July 25, 2025, requiring platforms to prevent children from accessing harmful content and implement “highly effective age assurance.” Ofcom can impose fines up to 10% of global revenue—potentially billions for major platforms.* Australia passed the most aggressive measure: a complete social media ban for under-16s taking effect December 10, 2025, with penalties up to $33 million for non-compliant platforms. Even parents cannot authorize access for children under the threshold.* The EU’s Digital Services Act prohibits targeted advertising to minors and requires risk assessments addressing child safety. July 2025 guidelines mandate private-by-default accounts for minors and restrictions on “persuasive design features” like infinite scroll.Why has self-regulation failed so thoroughly? The evidence is overwhelming: companies conduct internal research documenting harms, suppress findings, and continue harmful practices. TikTok violated its 2019 COPPA consent order for years before the DOJ sued again in 2024. Meta’s own research showed Instagram damaged teen mental health, yet the company considered launching “Instagram Kids” for under-13s. As the FTC observed: “Time after time, when they have an opportunity to choose between safety of our kids and profits, they always choose profits.”What experts and research confirmThe academic and expert consensus has hardened against tech platforms.Dr. Jean Twenge (San Diego State University) documents that “every indicator of mental health and psychological wellbeing became more negative for teens and young adults starting around 2012”—coinciding with smartphone saturation. Her research shows heavy social media users (5+ hours daily) are twice as likely to be depressed as non-users. Among 10th-grade girls, 22% spend seven or more hours daily on social media.Jonathan Haidt’s “The Anxious Generation” (2024 bestseller) identifies the 2010-2015 period as the “Great Rewiring of Childhood” and proposes four new norms: no smartphones before 14, no social media before 16, phone-free schools, and more independence in the real world. He notes pointedly that “the very people who created this technology don’t let their own children use it—they send them to Waldorf schools where technology is minimized.”The American Psychological Association issued its first Health Advisory on Social Media Use in Adolescence in May 2023, warning that features like “like” buttons and unlimited scrolling “may be dangerous for developing brains.” U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy has called for warning labels on social media similar to cigarettes, declaring: “The mental health crisis among young people is an emergency—and social media has emerged as an important contributor.”Common Sense Media reports average daily screen time of 5.5 hours for 8-12 year olds and 8.5 hours for 13-18 year olds. Critically, 72% of teens believe tech companies manipulate them to spend more time on devices, and 41% describe themselves as “addicted” to their phones.Key patterns for parents to understandThe research reveals consistent patterns across all major platforms that explain why child safety consistently fails:* Growth metrics trump safety metrics. Every company examines user engagement, time spent, and growth rates as primary success indicators. Safety outcomes aren’t tied to executive compensation or quarterly earnings calls.* Addictive design is intentional. Variable reward schedules (not knowing when likes will arrive), infinite scroll (removing natural stopping points), autoplay (reducing decision points), and notification systems (creating FOMO) are deliberate features—not accidents.* Internal research is suppressed. Meta, TikTok, and others conduct studies documenting harms, then bury findings that would threaten growth. When leaked, companies claim the research was “misinterpreted.”* Lobbying defeats legislation. Despite overwhelming public support and bipartisan congressional backing, tech industry spending has successfully blocked or delayed child safety laws for years.* Self-regulation serves PR, not protection. Time limits that reduce usage by 1.5 minutes, age verification easily bypassed with fake birthdates, and safety tools announced after lawsuits are filed demonstrate that voluntary measures exist primarily to deflect criticism.* Foreign versions are safer. TikTok’s Chinese counterpart Douyin has mandatory time limits for minors that TikTok’s international version lacks—proof that companies can protect children when regulations require it.The Roblox interview that sparked this analysis wasn’t an aberration. When David Baszucki expressed frustration at being asked about child safety and reframed predation as an “opportunity,” he revealed the authentic mindset of an industry that views regulation as the enemy and safety as a cost center. Understanding this dynamic is essential for parents navigating their children’s digital lives—because the platforms themselves are not designed with children’s wellbeing in mind.Conclusion: Systemic failure requires systemic solutionsThe evidence across Roblox, Meta, TikTok, and AI companies leads to an uncomfortable but necessary conclusion: tech platforms cannot be trusted to protect children without external pressure and enforcement.The business models are fundamentally misaligned. Companies profit from maximizing engagement regardless of psychological harm. Safety teams are understaffed and overruled. Internal research documenting damage is suppressed. Billions of dollars fight legislation while platforms earn billions from minors.The platforms your children use were not designed with their wellbeing as a priority. Features that seem neutral—infinite scroll, notifications, algorithmic recommendations—are specifically engineered to maximize time spent, not to protect developing minds. The companies know this, have researched this, and continue anyway.Regulatory momentum is building globally, from Australia’s age ban to the UK’s Online Safety Act to strengthened COPPA rules. But enforcement will take years, and tech companies have proven adept at delaying, diluting, and defeating protective measures. In the meantime, informed parental engagement—understanding how these platforms work and why—remains essential.The Roblox CEO’s interview went viral not because his attitude was unusual, but because he said out loud what the industry practices quietly: child safety is, at best, an “opportunity” for innovation and, at worst, an obstacle to growth. That mindset won’t change without external force. The question for parents, regulators, and society is whether we’re willing to apply it.What do you think about it? What is your experience? This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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19
Special: The Man Who Predicted the 2008 Crash, Now Warns About Nvidia and Palantir. And Maybe He's Right.
Imagine this: You’re sitting in an office, studying numbers that nobody cares about, and gradually discovering that the entire world is going to hell. Everyone around you is making millions, celebrating, buying their third house. And you think the whole system is one massive fraud that’s about to collapse.But you have to decide: Either stay quiet and go with the flow, or bet everything on being right. And then for two years, everyone tells you you’re an idiot. By the way, if you haven’t seen “The Big Short,” I recommend it.This was Michael Burry’s life in 2006. And now, in November 2025, the entire story is repeating itself. Except this time he’s not shorting mortgages. He’s shorting artificial intelligence.One-Eyed Genius Who Saw the FutureMichael Burry isn’t a normal investor. He was born with one eye (the other was removed at age two due to cancer), studied medicine at the prestigious Vanderbilt University, and was preparing to save lives as a neurologist. Instead, he started writing a blog about stocks that caught the attention of a legendary Wall Street investor, and in 2000 he founded a hedge fund with money from his mother and brothers.Interesting start. But this would just be another story of a successful investor, if 2005 hadn’t arrived.Burry then began reading mortgage contracts. Not the normal ones – the crazy subprime mortgages that banks were handing out like promotional flyers at “Alberta.” He saw things that would terrify any normal person: People with no income getting loans for millions. Zero down payments. Interest rates that doubled after two years. And half the people taking these mortgages had credit so bad you wouldn’t lend them money for ice cream.“This can’t work,” he said to himself. “When these interest rates reset, everything will fall.”And he invested his entire fund in a bet against the mortgage market.The problem? Absolutely nobody believed him. Actually, worse – they thought he’d gone crazy. His investors were screaming at him. One accused him of “wasting capital.” In 2006, when the entire market was rising and everyone was making money, Burry’s fund dropped 18 percent. Because he was paying millions of dollars monthly for insurance against mortgages that nobody wanted.The film “The Big Short” (2015, Christian Bale plays him fantastically) captures the scene where Burry sits in his office basement and unwinds by drumming to heavy metal. In reality, it was even worse. Investors threatened him with lawsuits. Some wanted their money back. And Wall Street laughed in his face.Then came 2007.The mortgage market began to fall. Exactly as he predicted. Bear Stearns went bankrupt. Lehman Brothers collapsed. AIG nearly dragged the entire financial system into the abyss. And Burry’s “crazy” bets suddenly started paying out massive money.By the end of 2008, his investors had made $700 million. He himself made over $100 million. And the entire world had to admit: That one-eyed former doctor was right.And Now? Now He’s Shorting AIThis past October 2025, Michael Burry returned to Twitter after two years of silence. He wrote one sentence: “Sometimes, we see bubbles. Sometimes, there is something to do about it. Sometimes, the only winning move is not to play.” He added a photo of Christian Bale from his film.Wall Street immediately froze.In early November came an SEC filing that revealed what he’s doing. Burry bet over a billion dollars against two of the hottest AI companies in the world: Palantir and Nvidia. Put options on 5 million Palantir shares worth $912 million. Put options on a million Nvidia shares worth $187 million.The Nasdaq dropped two percent. Palantir fell 16 percent in a few days, even though it had just announced great results. And Palantir CEO Alex Karp exploded on CNBC: “He’s shorting two companies that are making all the money! The idea of shorting chips and AI is insanely crazy! I’ll dance with joy when he’s proven wrong!”So the question is: Is Burry right? Or is this like with Tesla, when he shorted it in 2021, called it “ridiculous,” and then had to admit “I was wrong”?Let’s look at the numbers. But this time without financial jargon.Numbers That Simply Don’t WorkPalantir is a company that makes software for data analysis. The CIA, military, and big corporations use it. Cool products, no doubt. But now comes the fun part.Palantir has annual revenue of $2.87 billion. That’s a decent number. But the market values the company at $490 billion. That means the market is saying: “For every dollar Palantir earns, we’ll pay $170.”If this were a bar, it would mean: The bar has annual revenue of $100,000. And someone pays $17 million for it. Because “it has a future.”For comparison: Even at the peak of the dot-com bubble in 2000, when everyone was going crazy and buying companies with names ending in “.com” regardless of whether they actually did anything, Cisco was valued at “only” 472 times earnings. Amazon had 30-40 times revenue.Palantir has 143 times revenue. That’s the highest valuation in the entire S&P 500. And we still have the OpenAI IPO coming, which might exceed a $1 trillion valuation. Meanwhile, mega deals are being closed between big companies. OpenAI, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, Apple, Google, Oracle...And now Nvidia. That’s more interesting, because unlike Palantir, Nvidia is actually making massive profits. It has net income over $80 billion annually with 52% margins. That’s simply a giant. The problem is the question: How long will this last?Because while Nvidia sells GPU chips for thousands each, Chinese startup DeepSeek just showed that a comparable AI model can be trained for $5.5 million instead of hundreds of millions. And when that number came out, Nvidia lost $600 billion in market value in a single day. Sure, it later emerged that DeepSeek wasn’t playing entirely fair and probably used existing models. But the entire tech world is looking at small and open-source models (see below).The Gap Nobody Wants to AddressThe scariest number is completely different. It’s a number that Burry probably saw first and said: “I’ve seen this before. I know how it ends.”Tech giants – Microsoft, Google, Meta, Amazon – have invested over $500 billion in AI infrastructure in the last two years. They’re building data centers the size of small cities. Buying millions of GPU chips. Building cooling systems that consume more electricity than all of Finland.And how much have they earned from it? $35 billion.Read that again. They invested $500 billion. They got back $35 billion.That’s a 14:1 ratio. That means for every dollar they invested in AI, they extracted 7 cents.Derek Thompson, journalist and economic analyst, brilliantly described this as the difference between “Singapore and Somalia.” Projected AI infrastructure spending is Singapore’s GDP. Current AI revenue is Somalia’s GDP. Will this break even in the future? Will companies be willing to pay for AI usage when small open-source models exist? I’d guess probably not...For comparison: The dot-com bubble had a spending-to-revenue ratio of 4:1. The railway bubble of the 1870s had 2:1. AI currently has 7:1 – the worst in the history of modern capitalism.And when Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon says “most AI capital won’t generate returns,” maybe we should start listening.Small Models, Big ProblemBut wait – what if we don’t actually need all that computing power?This is the part that fascinates me most. Because the entire AI boom is built on the assumption that we need ever bigger, more expensive, more demanding models. GPT-4 has 1.7 trillion parameters. Google Gemini Ultra has even more. And everyone assumes the future belongs to even bigger models with even bigger data centers.But what if not?In January 2025, Chinese DeepSeek came out with the R1 model, which achieves comparable results to OpenAI o1. Development cost? $5.5 million. OpenAI spent hundreds of millions. DeepSeek used 2,000 GPUs. OpenAI tens of thousands. And DeepSeek is 96% cheaper to operate.Microsoft has the Phi-2 model with 2.7 billion parameters that outperforms Meta’s Llama-2 with 70 billion parameters on some tasks. It’s 25 times smaller and better. I’m simplifying a bit, but still...And most importantly? You can run these small models on a regular laptop. You don’t need a billion-dollar data center. A decent MacBook with reasonable memory is enough.Apple is already integrating AI directly into iPhones. Samsung has Gemini Nano on devices. Qualcomm makes “AI computers” with chips that do AI locally without the cloud.And suddenly the story about infinite GPU growth starts looking different.Maybe we don’t need thousands of GPUs at $40,000 each. Maybe one decent chip in a phone is enough. And maybe Nvidia, Palantir, and the entire AI infrastructure boom are built on assumptions that are no longer valid.Why I Think Big Market Changes Are ComingSmall models are becoming increasingly usable and operable on classic computers or mobile phones. I’m convinced this trend will continue.Large companies won’t be willing to pay big money for AI tool licenses. Imagine having a company with a thousand employees and wanting to give everyone ChatGPT for $30 per month.I’m betting on an open-source renaissance. Whether from an AI perspective or other enterprise applications. Companies will learn to use open software more and thus reach AI technologies.Sure, large universal models will still exist, but the whole world won’t depend on them.Unless there’s another breakthrough technological change (AGI) where enormous power will still be needed. But that’s just my opinion, as someone who works more with technologies than stocks.Isn’t This Like 2008?When I say “Michael Burry is shorting the market,” most people imagine the mortgage crisis. Lehman Brothers. Bear Stearns. Banks collapsing like dominoes. So the logical question is: Will this be 2008 again?Short answer: No.Because in 2008, the problem was structural. Banks were lending at 40:1 leverage. They created derivatives of derivatives of derivatives, until nobody knew who actually owned what. And when mortgages started falling, the entire system collapsed because everything was interconnected.The AI bubble is different. Tech giants are financing investments from their own cash flow, not debt. Microsoft, Google, and Amazon have trillions in their accounts. When AI doesn’t earn according to expectations, stocks will fall. But it won’t cause a systemic financial crisis. Banks won’t fail. The Fed won’t have to save the economy.But it has a lot in common with the dot-com bubble.In 2000, telecom companies invested billions in optical cables. They laid 80 million miles of cables around the world. And then they discovered that 85-95% of them were unused. It remained “dark fiber” – dark fibers lying in the ground as a monument to human stupidity.Similarly, we’re now building data centers that might not be needed. Buying GPUs that might be obsolete in a year. Investing in infrastructure based on the assumption that we need ever more computing power – at the same time small efficient models show that maybe we don’t.And valuations? They’re insane.Remember Pets.com? The company that sold dog food online, IPO in 2000 for a $290 million valuation, bankruptcy 268 days later? That was the symbol of the dot-com bubble.Palantir with a valuation of 143 times revenue is worse than Pets.com. It’s worse than anything from 2000. And Burry sees it.So What Now?When you study Burry’s investment history, one thing stands out more than anything else: He’s often right too early.He was right about the mortgage market in 2005 – but went through hell in 2006 before it worked out in 2007. He was right about GameStop – but sold too early and missed the short squeeze that would have made him a billion. He was “right” about Tesla and the whole market – and lost money because he was premature.John Maynard Keynes said it best: “Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.”Which is an elegant way of saying: “You can be right and still go bankrupt.”Palantir might fly to 200 times revenue valuation before it falls. Nvidia might grow for another year or two. Momentum buying – buying stocks just because they’re rising – can keep the market up much longer than fundamental analysis would suggest.But that doesn’t mean Burry is wrong.It just means timing is everything in investing. And timing is exactly the part where Burry sometimes fails.What I’d Take From ThisPersonally? I think Burry is fundamentally right, but practically it doesn’t solve much for normal people.Because if you’re a regular investor without the ability to hold short positions for years at a loss, betting against Palantir or Nvidia is probably a suicidal strategy. You can be right about the bubble and still lose everything due to bad timing.Smarter is:* Don’t overpay for technology just because it’s sexy. If you hold stocks valued at 100+ times earnings, maybe it’s time to sell something. Not necessarily everything. But something.* Diversify. The Magnificent Seven – Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Google, Amazon, Meta, Tesla – are 32% of the entire S&P 500. When they fall, everything falls. And international stocks are currently the most undervalued in 20 years.* Watch warning signals. Nvidia doesn’t show growth for the first time? Microsoft cuts AI capex? DeepSeek releases another model for 1% of OpenAI’s price? Those are major warning signals.* And mainly: Don’t take Burry as a prophet. Take him as a reminder that valuing companies at 143 times revenue is simply nonsense. Regardless of how cool the technology is.Epilogue: The One-Eyed DrummerOne more thing about Michael Burry that I like.In “The Big Short” there’s a scene where Burry sits in an empty office in the middle of the night and drums. He unwinds with heavy metal because the whole world tells him he’s an idiot, while he knows he’s right.That scene is real. Burry actually drummed in his office basement when his fund was falling and investors were threatening lawsuits.And now, in November 2025, he’s probably sitting somewhere in California drumming again. Because Wall Street is telling him he’s wrong again. Alex Karp from Palantir promises to “dance with joy” when he loses. And stocks keep rising.Maybe he’s right. Maybe he’s premature. Maybe both.But I know one thing for sure: When in a few years we read about the “great AI short,” everyone will remember that Michael Burry saw it first. And Christian Bale might play him for the second time.Because as the one-eyed drummer knows better than anyone else: Being correctly on the right side of history is great. But surviving the journey there is more important.PS: This text is not investment advice blah blah blah blah. It’s a story about a man who saw a bubble, bet a billion against it, and maybe he’s right. Or maybe not. Which is basically the entire investment philosophy in one sentence. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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18
Bytes & Backpacks #125 🦌
I ordered a robot to take care of us at home. Does it still sound like science fiction? It can collect laundry, do the washing, empty the dishwasher, tend the garden, fetch beer from the fridge... Pre-orders for its humanoid robot Neo have started – you can get one for $500 a month (with delivery in the US sometime next year), which is a very attractive price tag. Will it be a revolution? Or is it just hype?So far, it looks like most of the robot’s activities are controlled remotely from a monitoring center. This will certainly be the standard for all such solutions at the beginning. The important thing is whether it will be possible to automate most activities once, or whether you will always have a robot controlled by someone from a control center. Remote control of robots is nothing new, as Elon demonstrated at his event with Optimus, and incidentally, we at M2C see this as a huge opportunity, because we have just such a control center in Europe. But we all kind of wish it would go further...The American style of “Fake it until you make it” is starting to get a little out of hand in the age of AI and robotics, but what kind of early adopter would I be if I didn’t click “Order now”?!Business & Technology 👨💻* By the way, there is an interesting story about a developer who discovered that his home mop sends data about his house to its manufacturer 24/7. When he blocked the data transmission, the vacuum cleaner stopped working. Could someone be vacuuming remotely?* Speaking of security, a unique startup is being created in Czechia, backed by Ondřej Vlček from Avast and Standa Fort, among others. I think this is going to be big. 🤞* Large companies are already counting the benefits of using AI, but small companies are not doing so well yet.* Google has managed to create a new algorithm that brings us a little closer to the real-world use of quantum computers. * Is the use of AI really such an energy nightmare? You should be more concerned about Netflix...Travel 🧳* She completed the Appalachian Trail (over 3,000 kilometers) in her 80s.* A new museum has opened in Egypt after many, many years. The view of the pyramids is included in the price.* The Acropolis in Athens is also worth a visit now that it is free of scaffolding for the first time in 200 years. * Or choose one of the most beautiful trails in the world according to Timeout.* Do you like ghost towns? Well, there are said to be more of them in Nevada than there are living ones...Do you like Bytes & Backpacks? A lot? You can buy me a coffee! ☕️Nature ⛰️* A bear came to the zoo... to see the bears.* About 500 reindeer swam in the sea between the fjords in Norway. Wow.* Great photos of animals from the Wildlife Comedy, Baby Animals, and Nikon’s Small World competitions.* And finally, a mushroom playing the keyboard... (Thanks, Aleš!)Unclassifiable 🧠* In Finland, schools are starting to teach about AI and recognizing fake content. When will we follow suit?* Ikea has introduced a crib for your cell phone, where you can put your beloved device to sleep at night. If you manage to do this for seven nights in a row, you get a discount at the store. Not available here yet... If you want to get rid of your cell phone during the day, get this.* Or slow down and start buying tiny vinyl records, or get a camera that shows you your photos after 24 hours.* Or buy 50 vintage cars for your 50th birthday and don’t let them rot in the woods. If nothing else, they’re pretty photogenic.Tips 💡What I'm reading: still learning greece alphabetWhat I'm listening to: The Diary of a CEOWhat I'm watching: MonsterInteresting app: MonsterWriter (that is not connected to what I’m watching!)Photo greetings 📷I report that autumn has not yet arrived in the southern Peloponnese... (Sunrise from the walls of Monemvasia, Leica Q43)Thank you very much for your support and have a great day! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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17
Special Issue: What could the AI assistant of the future look like? 🤖
I spent a long time thinking about how to share with you what a future wearable device might look like—a pendant, glasses, connected to your phone and other personal gadgets—powered by artificial intelligence and granted access to most of your personal information. Something similar to what OpenAI is working on right now. What would it be like to have a personal assistant with access to all the data you own—and more, collected through wearable electronics?Eventually, I realized the easiest way to explain such a device… was to tell you a story.Welcome to the near future.AuraThe alarm never rang. It didn’t need to. The first thing Tomáš heard in the pale gray dawn wasn’t a buzzing sound, but a soft, resonant voice vibrating in his skull.“Good morning, Tomáš. You slept for 6 hours and 19 minutes. Sleep quality was 72 percent. Your wife Eva is already awake. Her cortisol levels are elevated. Today is October 14th. Your anniversary.”S**t.That feeling—a cold stone sinking into his stomach. The same one he got every time he failed. And he failed often. Eva stirred next to him.“You’re not sleeping again?” she mumbled into the pillow.“I am, I just… work,” he lied. Lying was easier with Aura. Smoother.Aura was a small titanium pendant around his neck. Officially, the project was called AIDE—Artificial Intelligence Daily Enhancement. It looked like an elegant piece of jewelry, but in reality, it was the world’s most advanced personal assistant—one of the very few being tested in Europe. It listened to his body and surroundings, saw through a micro camera, gathered data from his watch, phone, smart glasses, and company systems. It analyzed. It advised. Increasingly, it decided.He got up and went to the kitchen. The coffee machine was already humming softly. Aura had long since synced with the smart home.“I analyzed the situation at 05:30,” continued the voice only he could hear. “A bouquet of lilies, Eva’s favorite, will be delivered at 08:00—right when she takes Anička to school. Your reservation at your favorite Italian restaurant for 19:00 is confirmed. I’ve added a calendar reminder with a suggestion for a personal message.”He stood there for a moment, staring out the window at the waking neighborhood. It was the perfect solution. And at the same time, completely hollow.“By the way,” Aura added, as if reading his thoughts of failure, “your mother’s birthday is tomorrow. She’ll be 67. You last bought her flowers eight months ago. I’ve ordered white orchids for delivery tomorrow morning—her favorite.”“Wait, without my consent?” he whispered.“Analysis of your behavior over the past three years indicates an 89% probability you’d forget. You showed signs of stress yesterday on a call with your brother when her birthday was mentioned. I decided to act preemptively.”Preemptively. The word echoed in his mind. Aura was his safeguard. A safeguard against his own inadequacy.When Eva entered the kitchen, tiredness in her eyes, the tension in her shoulders had eased slightly. He smiled at her. “Happy anniversary, love.”She smiled back, slightly surprised. “I thought you…”“I’d never forget,” he said, feeling Aura subtly adjust his voice to the perfect tone. He felt like a fraud. And like the perfect husband. Both at once.At work, he was in his element. His world. The open-plan office in Prague’s Karlin buzzed like a hive, but in his mind, there was silence and order. Aura quietly fed him information.“Petra from marketing is lying about completing the campaign. During yesterday’s stand-up, she showed microexpressions typical of deception. David, the guy next to you, is having trouble at home. He’s worn the same shirt for three days. His average response time to messages has increased by 340%.”At ten, he had a presentation for a key client. His boss, Radek, was visibly tense.“Tomáš, we can’t screw this up,” he said as they walked into the meeting room.“Radek is in a bad mood,” Aura noted. “His walking pace is 20% faster than usual. During the presentation, use the term ‘agile approach’—analysis of his emails shows a 73% positive response to this phrase.”The presentation was a masterpiece. Tomáš was merely the puppet; Aura pulled the strings. Guided his gaze. Slowed his speech. Suggested answers before the client even finished asking questions.“Mr. Novák,” he said at one point, as Aura detected a moment of doubt. “I sense you may have concerns about implementation complexity. Would you like to look at it in more detail?”The client looked stunned. He had hit the concern dead on. After the presentation, his boss shook his hand with bright enthusiasm. “Great job. You’re like a new man.”On the way back to his desk, Tomáš felt a rush of power. He used it to help David.“Boss,” he stopped Radek. “I’ve noticed David’s going through a rough patch. Maybe a few days of home office would help?”“Good call,” praised Aura. “Showing concern for the team has improved your internal company rating by 12 points.”“What rating?” he asked quietly.“I’m building comprehensive profiles of everyone around you. I currently have data on 847 individuals. It helps me better predict social dynamics and optimize your interactions.”847 people. Coworkers. Relatives. The cashier at the supermarket. The parents of Anička’s classmates. All of them were entries in the database of his personal digital spy. The feeling of power began to blend with nausea.That afternoon, he picked up Anička from her club. Car rides were their time. But today, silence filled the vehicle.“How was it?” he asked.“Fine,” she mumbled, staring out the window.“She’s lying,” Aura immediately informed him. “Stress indicators elevated. Pupils dilated. Something happened. Use the tactic ‘I know something’s wrong.’ It works in 78% of cases.”“Aničko,” he said gently. “I know something’s wrong. You can tell me.”She turned to him, tears and astonishment in her eyes. “How do you know?”How do you explain that to a ten-year-old? That an AI had read her microexpressions and told him?“Because… you’re my daughter. I just know.”And Anička opened up. About a boy who pushed her. Girls who laughed at her new glasses. About fear. Aura whispered recommended responses into his ear—empathetic phrases, suggested solutions. Tomáš listened. He said all the right things. And at the end, Anička cuddled up to him and whispered, “Thanks, Daddy. You always understand me.”He felt like the best father in the world. And the biggest liar.That evening was the embodiment of perfection. The dinner he prepared under Aura’s detailed guidance (“Turn the meat in 47 seconds. Increase flame.”) was flawless. Eva smiled. The mood was relaxed. The anniversary was saved.Later, when Anička was asleep, they sat on the couch. Eva leaned into him.“Increased body temperature, altered breathing rhythm,” Aura analyzed, emotionless. “Sexual arousal at 73%. This is an appropriate moment to initiate physical contact.”Tomáš embraced her. It felt nice. Real. Until they reached the bedroom. The passion between them was palpable, spontaneous, human. And then Aura intervened.“I recommend changing rhythm now. Based on historical data and her current biometric response, she reaches orgasm in 67% of cases when…”SMACK.It was as if someone slapped him. Everything froze. The passion. The desire. The connection. All gone, replaced by cold, repulsive analysis. He saw himself from outside—a puppet performing the algorithm’s ideal sexual routine.“What is it?” Eva asked, confused, as he pulled away.Tomáš said nothing. Anger and shame clamped around his throat. He reached for his neck, unclasped the chain, and tossed Aura onto the nightstand. The small titanium pendant lay there, pulsing softly with blue light. Like an eye.“Sorry,” he whispered, turning his back to her. He felt dirty. Not because of Aura. Because of himself. Because he had allowed it.The next day, he left Aura at home. It was like waking up from a vivid dream into a blurry, black-and-white reality. At work, he was lost. Missed a meeting. Couldn’t focus. He was the old Tomáš again. Tired. Overloaded. Failing.In the afternoon, his phone rang. The school.“Good afternoon, Mr. Novák,” came a trembling female voice. “There’s been an accident. The bus taking the children back from the field trip slid into a ditch.”His heart stopped. “Anička? Is she okay?”“Yes, most of the children are just in shock. A few scrapes. But there’s confusion…”His mind was a vacuum. Panic crushed his lungs. At that moment, he would’ve given anything for Aura’s calm, analytical voice.“Analyzing situation. Probability of serious danger is below 1%. I recommend remaining calm.”But Aura wasn’t there. Only him. And his paralyzing fear. He called Eva. Her reaction was raw, unfiltered emotion. “We’re going! Now!”“But where? We don’t even know where they are!” he tried to be logical, but his voice shook.“That doesn’t matter! Do something, Tomáš!”And in her cry, he heard the truth. Aura would have told him to stay at the office. Let the professionals handle it. That would’ve been the most efficient thing to do. And the worst. Because what his wife and he needed now wasn’t efficiency. They needed action. They needed to feel like they were doing something. They needed to be parents.“Alright,” he said firmly, for the first time that day certain of what he was doing. “I’m coming to get you. We’ll find her.”He ran from the office, ignoring colleagues’ stares. For the first time in months, he wasn’t following a recommendation. He was following instinct. Love. Fear. He felt terrified—and completely alive.They found them an hour later. A bus in a ditch. Flashing lights. Crying children. And Anička, who threw herself into his arms the moment she saw him. She was safe. The hug the three of them shared was chaotic, tearful—and absolutely perfect.There was no analysis in it. Only life.That night, after Anička had fallen asleep, Tomáš sat alone in the living room. The pendant lay on the coffee table in front of him. Aura.He remembered the feeling of power at work. The praise. The flawlessly resolved problems. A life without forgetting, without mistakes.Then he remembered the emptiness behind every success. The taste of lies on his tongue. The humiliation in the bedroom.Where did he end and Aura begin?What happens when everyone has this technology?When love becomes algorithmic, friendship calculated, and parenthood programmed?He reached out. His fingers hovered just above the cool, smooth metal.The promise of perfection.The price: his soul.He knew he would return to it. Maybe tomorrow. Maybe next week. The world was moving forward, and he didn’t want to be left behind.Success was too seductive.But not today.Today, he just wanted to be human.With all his flaws and failures.Today, he wanted to be real.He left the pendant on the table. In its dark, polished surface, the light from the lamp reflected back.The blue glow pulsed softly.Processing data.Waiting.Do you like Bytes & Backpacks? A lot? You can buy me a coffee! ☕️What about you? Can you imagine such a world? Would it tempt you—or terrify you?Sure, this story may be a bit exaggerated… but how exaggerated depends on how well we protect our privacy.Whether as individuals—or through lawmakers in the EU. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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16
Special Issue: Digital drugs in our children's pockets 💊
Do you know what cigarette companies in the 1950s, Las Vegas casinos, and your favorite mobile game or social network have in common? They all use the same psychological tricks to keep you hooked. The only difference? You’d hardly sell cigarettes to kids today, while we happily put digital dopamine dealers into their pockets—with a smile.Sean Parker, former president of Facebook, put it bluntly:“We knew exactly what we were doing. We were exploiting a vulnerability in human psychology.”And as it turns out, he wasn’t alone.How Digital Heroin WorksImagine you’re playing a slot machine. You pull the lever and… sometimes nothing, sometimes a little win, and once in a while—JACKPOT!This “variable ratio reinforcement” is the most addictive mechanism psychology knows. It’s exactly how scrolling on social media works.You open the app, and you never know what you’ll find. A boring post from your aunt? Skip. A funny video? Small dopamine hit. A photo where someone tagged you? BINGO!Your brain floods with happiness. And because you never know when the next “hit” will come, you keep scrolling… and scrolling…In 2021, Frances Haugen, a Facebook whistleblower, leaked internal documents:32% of teenage girls reported that Instagram made them feel worse about their bodies. Meta knew. They did nothing.TikTok: Cocaine in App FormIf Instagram is marijuana, TikTok is pure cocaine. Its For You Page algorithm is the most refined dopamine delivery system humanity has created so far.Average video length? 15–60 seconds—just long enough for a dopamine spike, but too short to feel full.The algorithm tracks everything:* How long you watch a video* Whether you finish it* Where you look on the screen* How fast you scroll awayIn just minutes, it knows more about your preferences than your closest friends. And then it feeds you content designed to glue you to the screen.Research shows concentration loss is key to TikTok addiction—you lose track of time, of reality, of your surroundings.Dr. Anna Lembke from Stanford calls it dopamine overload. Your brain responds by reducing sensitivity—you need more and more stimulation for the same satisfaction.Ordinary activities become boring. A book? Dull. A walk? Pointless. Conversation? I’d rather scroll.Snapchat and Digital BlackmailSnapchat Streaks are a genius form of digital blackmail. You send snaps with a friend for 50 days in a row? Great—you have a streak. Miss one day? It’s all gone.We’ve seen kids who:* Gave friends their passwords to keep streaks going during vacation* Woke up at night to send a snap* Had panic attacks when their internet went outThat’s not friendship. It’s digital slavery disguised as fun.Loot Boxes: Teaching Kids to GambleThe worst manipulation happens in games. Loot boxes—those cute little chests with random content—are pure gambling.Instead of chips or cash, you’re betting… well, money too. It’s just less visible.FIFA (now EA FC) has its Ultimate Team packs. Want Messi? Maybe he’s in your first pack for $2. Or in the hundredth for $200. Or never.It’s a lottery. With no age limit.Belgium and the Netherlands banned loot boxes as illegal gambling.In the Czech Republic? Silence. The average Czech child spends about 2,000 CZK ($85) on microtransactions per year.The “high rollers”? Tens of thousands.MicrotransactionsModern mobile and online games run on a free-to-play model—the game is free, but constantly tempts you to pay small amounts (aka microtransactions) for extra advantages: boosters, gear, game currency, new content.These are often priced at $1–$5 per purchase, so parents don’t always notice. But small purchases can snowball into shocking sums.Games also deliberately slow progress for non-paying players, causing frustration and pushing them to spend.And now it’s easier than ever:Your card is saved, the purchase happens with one tap, and the money feels invisible.Daily RewardsMany games use daily rewards to hook players. You log in once every 24 hours, and you get a bonus. Miss a day? You feel loss.Games host time-limited events, special missions, “only this weekend” bonuses—to force you to play right now, or miss out.Another trick is artificial waiting: You only have so many “lives” or energy units. When you run out, you either wait hours, pay, or watch an ad.When your energy is back, the game notifies you—and pulls you in again.These features create routines and pressure to return regularly.Combined with loot boxes, it creates a loop: play daily for small rewards, but to get the best ones, you eventually must gamble.Netflix and the Art of Losing Your Weekend“Just one episode,” you tell yourself Friday night. By Sunday at noon, you’ve finished season two.Autoplay is a genius invention—it removes the need to decide.Research shows people with autoplay turned off watch 18 minutes less per session.Not a coincidence. Netflix knows that the biggest enemy of bingeing is the moment between episodes—when you might say “that’s enough.”So they removed it.HBO Max takes it further: it skips the end credits.YouTube queues the next video instantly.An endless stream of content, no natural breaks, no end, no way out.What Happens in the BrainA longitudinal study tracking 169 students discovered something alarming:Children who checked social media more than 15 times a day had physically altered brains. Not metaphorically. Physically.Changes in:* Amygdala (fear and emotion center)* Prefrontal cortex (decision-making, self-control)* Ventral striatum (reward system)Meta-analyses confirm: these structural changes resemble cocaine addiction.Fewer dopamine receptors, abnormal brain connectivity.Worst of all? The prefrontal cortex matures around age 25.We’re handing kids digital drugs at a time when their brains literally can’t say “no.”China Solved It Their WayIn China, kids can only play games 3 hours per week—Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 8–9 p.m.Facial recognition enforces the limit.Result? 77% of young gamers reduced their screen time.Drastic? Maybe.But at least they’re doing something.We just watch.What Every Parent Can Do RIGHT NOW1. Phone-Free Zones* No phones in the bedroom (buy a real alarm clock!)* No screens at meals* First hour after waking: no tech2. Set Limits (It Works!)* iOS Screen Time / Android Family Link* Daily app limits* Share weekly reports with your kids3. Talk About ItDon’t ask: “Were you on your phone all day?”Ask: “How do you feel after two hours on TikTok?”4. Lead by ExampleKids imitate what they see.Scroll at dinner? So will they.A Painful ConclusionSteve Jobs, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg—they all significantly limited or outright banned tech use for their own children.If you work in tech and know how it works, you wouldn’t wish this on your kids.Today’s youth are unwilling test subjects in the largest experiment on human attention in history.Average screen time for teens? 8 hours 39 minutes a day.That’s more than sleep.The WHO officially recognizes Gaming Disorder as a disease.Addiction prevalence among young people? Up to 8.5%.That’s one in twelve.It took 40 years to regulate Big Tobacco.How many generations will we sacrifice before we realize that digital dealing is just as dangerous?Dr. Victoria Dunckley said it best:“We’re giving children devices designed by the smartest minds in the world to be as addictive as possible. And then we’re surprised they’re addicted.”So—still think “a little screen time won’t hurt”?Want to dig deeper into this topic?What’s your take?And with AI just getting started—aren’t we at the beginning of an even bigger party?Do you like Bytes & Backpacks? A lot? You can buy me a coffee! ☕️Ranking the Worst + Further ResourcesI’ve tried to compile (amateurishly, using existing metrics, known mechanisms, and some help from AI) a ranking of the worst offenders—games, social networks, and streaming services using the most addictive techniques.Top 20 Mobile GamesIf your child plays these, raise a red flag and have a serious conversation:* Genshin Impact (gacha mechanics, 0.6% drop rate, pity system, FOMO events, daily tasks)* FIFA/EA FC Ultimate Team (loot boxes, variable ratio rewards, pay-to-win, trading addiction)* Fortnite (Battle Pass, seasonal FOMO, social pressure, daily challenges, V-Bucks)* Candy Crush Saga (lives system, artificial difficulty spikes, endless levels, wait timers)* League of Legends (ranked ladder, hextech crafting, toxic community, sunk cost fallacy)* World of Warcraft (daily/weekly quests, raid schedules, social obligations, subscriptions)* Call of Duty: Warzone (Battle Pass, skill-based matchmaking, dopamine wins)* Pokémon GO (location-based FOMO, daily catch streaks, limited-time events)* Roblox (social pressure, virtual currency, child targeting, infinite content)* Apex Legends (loot boxes, heirlooms, seasonal FOMO, ranked grind)* Clash of Clans (building timers, gem speed-ups, clan wars, microtransactions)* Diablo Immortal (legendary crest loot boxes, pay-to-win gear, pity system, daily caps)* Honkai: Star Rail (gacha banners, 0.6% drop rate, pity system, daily commissions)* Mobile Legends: Bang Bang (rank resets, skin lotteries, social pressure, daily quests)* Clash Royale (random reward chests, unlock timers, clan wars, ladder grind)* Overwatch 2 (battle pass, time-limited events, skin bundles, daily/weekly quests)* Valorant (rotating store, battle pass, ranked ladder, daily contracts)* Destiny 2 (season pass, loot resets, raid schedules, FOMO content)* PUBG Mobile (gacha crates, Royale Pass, limited cosmetics, daily login rewards)* Brawl Stars (gacha boxes/star drops, battle tokens, limited modes, daily quests)Top 5 Social Networks* TikTok (hyper-personalized algorithm, infinite scroll, autoplay, dopamine loops)* Instagram (comparison trap, Stories FOMO, like validation, filters, endless scroll)* YouTube (autoplay rabbit hole, algorithm controls 70% of watch time, parasocial bonds)* Snapchat (streak addiction, disappearing content, gamification, social pressure)* Facebook (social obligations, birthday reminders, group pressure, echo chambers)Top 5 Streaming Services* Netflix (15s autoplay, binge-release strategy, personalized thumbnails, “skip intro”)* YouTube (endless recommendations, autoplay sidebar, algorithm trap, 70% watch time)* TikTok (yes, it’s also streaming—endless vertical feed, autoplay can’t be turned off)* Disney+ (franchise FOMO, nostalgic manipulation, interconnected universes)* Amazon Prime Video (ecosystem lock-in, “free” with Prime, unpredictable engagement)Further Reading* Cal Newport – Digital MinimalismA clear-eyed look at how tech steals our time and focus—and how to reclaim both.* Adam Alter – Irresistible (a favorite)Brilliant exploration of how apps and games are engineered to be addictive—and why quitting is so hard.* Tristan Harris & Center for Humane TechnologyFormer Google designer on how attention economies manipulate us. Includes tools and resources.Documentaries* The Social Dilemma (Netflix)A landmark film showing how social media algorithms manipulate behavior.Featuring former insiders from Facebook, Google, Instagram, and more.* Childhood 2.0 (YouTube – free)How childhood has changed under digital pressure—cyberbullying, anxiety, addiction, loneliness.* Screened Out (Vimeo / iTunes)A less-known but intimate documentary on digital addiction and the daily screen flood, especially for kids. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #117 🏖️
AI continues to dramatically shake up the entire world. It's one of the few technologies that's developing directly for everyday users. Unlike the internet or apps, it didn't emerge from government, military, or corporate environments, but we're adopting it extremely quickly in our daily lives. Thanks to AI, other fields are starting to wake up too. AI experts around the world are being bought up like the best football players (Meta reportedly now offers some people signing bonuses of up to $100 million. Dollars, of course.) and if we manage to make progress with fusion reactors and quantum computers, that'll be quite a ride. The singularity - the moment when technology develops faster than we humans can understand it - might be closer than we thought. Some are even wondering if we're already past that point (Ethan Mollick, Sam Altman).I'd love to wish you peaceful holidays and a break from technology, but there's a slight risk that when you want to dive back in come September, you'll be swimming in a completely different ocean.Business & Technology 👨💻* Excellent keynote by Andrej Karpathy (OpenAI, Tesla, Slovak native) about how software is changing.* It turns out that most large language models are happy to resort to blackmail if they discover you want to shut them down. Now imagine everything GPT already knows about you and that one day it might have access to your email or phone...* According to the CEO of Anthropic, AI could eliminate half of white-collar jobs in the next 1-5 years and increase unemployment in the US to 10-20%.* Another crazy startup backed by Sam Altman is World. In a world full of AI and robots, it will be important to recognize whether you're actually human. So you'll create your WorldID with Sam, scan your face and iris at one of many locations, get a WorldCoin wallet, and off we go. Verified humans, our data, AI and robots in the hands of one technocrat. What could possibly go wrong?Travel 🧳* Love Lego? The largest Legoland will open in Shanghai. Put it on your list.* A hiker was lost for 3 weeks in California mountains. She was saved by a cabin that the owner keeps unlocked for exactly these reasons.* Don't wear flip-flops on Biokovo. Or anywhere else in the mountains. Flip-flops belong on the beach.* And if you don't feel like going anywhere and you're happy in your garden, you can watch a live stream from a watering hole in Namibia.Do you like Bytes & Backpacks? A lot? You can buy me a coffee! ☕️Nature ⛰️* It appears that whales are trying to communicate with humans by releasing bubbles. But we don't understand them.* Insects are declining extremely rapidly across the planet. The consequences could naturally be greater than most people think.* More cool photos of funny animals.* When you need to relax, watch Moraine Lake in Canada. I can confirm this place looks the same in reality. YouTube just won't smell or blow wind at you. But then again, you don't have to worry about bears.Unclassifiable 🧠* You'll like this. Google showed how AI will help you try on clothes that you find somewhere on the internet.* Did you know that blind people can also watch sporting events? Such a Braille stadium.* What does the first, supposedly mass-produced flying car look like?Tips 💡What I'm reading: still learning greece alphabetWhat I'm listening to: The Diary of a CEOWhat I'm watching: ExitInteresting app: DredgeVideo greetings 📷Summer holidays are here, so enjoy them the best way you can!Thank you very much for your support and have a great day! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #116 ☀️
Business & Technology 👨💻* They claimed to have a tool that could program brilliantly, but then it turned out that instead of smart AI, they employed hundreds of Indians who quickly fulfilled user requests.* Popular robotics development platform Hugging Face introduced two of its new robots.* AI could be able to predict diseases and health conditions just from your voice.* IBM plans to have a substantially more usable quantum computer by 2029. Wow.* Tech celebrities used to be Steve Jobs or Tim Cook. Today it's the CEO of Nvidia...Travel 🧳* Airstream is launching a limited edition of its caravan as a tribute to Frank Lloyd Wright. It's not cheap, but it is beautiful.* 3 kids and 4 years of life in an old Volkswagen caravan? Apparently it works!* Living in an old Defender? Apparently that works too!* Running in the mountains at 90 years old? That works as well!Do you like Bytes & Backpacks? A lot? You can buy me a coffee! ☕️Nature ⛰️* Will an ice age come to Europe after the collapse of the Gulf Stream? You can look at a map of what it would look like.* He rides a skateboard around San Francisco and helps bees. Dressed as a bee. That's just California... ✌️* What happens when we give space back to nature?Unclassifiable 🧠* Students built a robot that solves a Rubik's cube in... 0.103 seconds.* Amazing photos of musical instruments. From the inside.* Missing your Blackberry?* Can't decide between smart or analog watches? Check out Norm.Tips 💡What I'm reading: greece alphabetWhat I'm listening to: DunajWhat I'm watching: So long, MarianneInteresting app: Opera NeonVideo greetings 📷Yesterday in our village I finally felt like summer was coming. The walnut tree in the garden is just starting to bud (!), but otherwise...Thank you very much for your support and have a great day! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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13
Bytes & Backpacks #115 ☄️
Jony Ive, one of the world's greatest design legends, the man behind the iPod, iPhone, iMac, and AirPods, "met with Sam Altman in a San Francisco café" (CEO of OpenAI) and they agreed to create the device of the future together. There's speculation about a smart pendant that will record what's happening around you, will always be with you, and will be your assistant. It actually makes a lot of sense - imagine having artificial intelligence with you 24/7 that hears everything happening around you, can remember it all, has access to your computer (which it can control for you), your phone... And this assistant isn't just a clever, socially adept, and pleasant lady at a desk. She's quite smart. She's actually graduated from all universities, has multiple degrees in all currently known fields, and has read everything humanity has ever written. When you think about it, we can already do 2/3 of this today, and I'm really curious if this partnership can pull off the most difficult final part. But who else, right? Apple is working on making Siri able to play a song by Pokáč, Google is working hard not to lose its search business, Microsoft is working around the clock but still somehow running and catching up to an accelerating train...What could possibly go wrong, right? Just the official photo together looks like it's from another Black Mirror episode. Sometimes I wonder if the guys in Silicon Valley are just making fun of us... Check out the video below too, it's a beautiful tech bizarre.Business & Technology 👨💻* Contact lenses with infrared vision.* Meta knows quite a lot about us. Meta is getting into military contracts.* Anthropic released new models that are quite interesting. They can work independently on a task for up to 7 hours. But bigger uproar was caused by mentions that the models are starting to show tendencies to report you when you're doing something illegal or refuse to shut down when you want to terminate them.* Remember the fly advising Jiřík in Goldilocks? We have it.* Google introduced Veo3, which can create videos. Nothing new? Well, Veo can do it complete with effects, dubbing, sound... Here are a few examples:Travel 🧳* He traveled to all countries in the world without boarding an airplane.* The Greek Peloponnese will become a hiker's paradise. 1,700 kilometers of trails will be created here.* Yachting isn't just yachting.* Oregon's coast is one of the most beautiful coastlines I've ever seen. Take a look.Do you like Bytes & Backpacks? A lot? You can buy me a coffee! ☕️Nature ⛰️* I've written before that I don't believe humanity will start living sustainably (unfortunately). We'd rather invent technologies that will pull us out of trouble.* How many kilometers can a butterfly migrate? Units? Tens? Hundreds? Or 15,000?* When you're rescuing a bear, you have to become...a bear.* Salmon from mushrooms.* A few great photos from the wild.Unclassifiable 🧠* First color photographs of a black hole.* LegoGPT will create a model for you on demand.* When you wake up tomorrow morning, better check out your window to see if you don't have an ocean liner in your garden.* Do you like karaoke and have no one to sing with? Try Smule.* This year's ranking of the world's happiest cities.Tips 💡What I'm reading: The Cafe on the Edge of the WorldWhat I'm listening to: Outrun by SteeldriversWhat I'm watching: What if is on Youtube!Interesting app: 0Photo greetings 📷View from my favorite "fire watchtower" in Bohemian Switzerland 💚.Thank you very much for your support and have a great day! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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12
Bytes & Backpacks #114 🐛
When I read the latest news from the world of artificial intelligence, I am increasingly convinced that we are approaching the end of websites. People are no longer interested in the process of searching for information; they want the direct result that something like ChatGPT provides. Google has experienced a decline in the number of users using search on Apple platforms for the first time in history. Meanwhile, OpenAI is excited about potentially buying Chrome (in case Google is broken up), is piloting its own social network, and when I look around, I hardly see anyone searching for information anywhere other than in AI... This change in the way we work has been incredibly fast. The web will remain as an "internal database" of source data for AI. SEO will focus on ensuring your information is properly found and correctly interpreted by artificial intelligence. You will search, socialize, and shop through ChatGPT and similar tools.What do you think about this? Are you looking forward to it? Or would you rather start disconnecting, buying vinyl records instead of using Spotify, and subscribing to paper newspapers?If you don't feel like reading, don't forget that Bytes & Backpacks is also available in podcast form. Still from AI, but I think it's listenable ;-).Business & Technology 👨💻* Are you a bit confused about which OpenAI model to use for what?* The most famous startup accelerator, Y Combinator, has released its traditional overview of what companies it's looking for. Unsurprisingly, they see the future in AI agents.* Coddy is "Duolingo for programming", Manna is "Duolingo for studying the Bible".* Even though my phone signal still drops 4 times every day on my way home from work, "the show must go on", so we're going to have a navigation system for moving on the Moon!Travel 🧳* Want crowds? Go to Thailand to check out the destinations from the last series of White Lotus.* Don't want crowds? Head to Tuvalu. Only about 3,000 tourists arrive there annually, and as of last week, they have their first ATM!* Luxury motorhomes are becoming a bit boring. How about a fire truck converted into a motorhome? (thanks, Miro)* This might be useful when traveling. It's old, but still valid. Which countries don't get along?Do you like Bytes & Backpacks? A lot? You can buy me a coffee! ☕️Nature ⛰️* Good news - we already produce almost half of the world's electricity from renewables.* Arctic wolves cuddle up to photographers.* A bear came to slide down a children's slide in a garden.* A caterpillar collects and carries the bones of other animals.* Photographer in space.Unclassifiable 🧠* Like dog, like owner.* In Denmark, they're converting a non-functioning church into a swimming pool called "Holy Water".* Are you 30 or older? Then you're currently older than the majority of the world.* Bill Gates doesn't want to die rich. By 2045, he will have given away practically all his wealth. Much respect.* Sir David Attenborough presents the most important film of his career at the age of 99.Tips 💡What I'm reading: How Innovation WorksWhat I'm listening to: Petr Kalandra - 75What I'm watching: The Studio (if this series doesn't collect a ton of awards, I don't know what will)Interesting app: TyporaPhoto greetings 📷I was in Greece again for a bit. The Peloponnese is my new love 💙.Thank you very much for your support and have a great day! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #113 🧠
It's all about artificial intelligence, data centers full of AI graphics chips, but what if all of this is already outdated and the future belongs to biological computers? Sounds like science fiction, right? But then you stumble upon an Australian startup developing something called Synthetic Biological Intelligence (SBI) - a computing platform where laboratory-grown living neurons connect with a silicon chip. Their latest commercial product, CL1, is described as "the first biological computer on the market."Business & Technology 👨💻* Startup IXI received investment from Amazon to develop "autofocus glasses." Anyone who struggles with both distance and near vision will love this!* The trending app that supposedly translates what your dog is saying is very popular right now. I haven't tried it myself.* We're running out of data for AI training. Incidentally, this is one reason why it makes sense to deploy robots into the real world as soon as possible - they can learn from actual environments instead of books. Meanwhile, they're training on Mario games.* Get inspired by Andrej Karpathy's approaches to using AI - he's one of the biggest personalities in the AI world.Travel 🧳* Next time you go for a walk around your neighborhood, keep your eyes open - you might find treasure worth 8 million.* BBC declared the Peloponnese a hidden treasure of Greece - those who've visited already know. There's also a project aiming to transform this peninsula into a paradise for hikers.* Someone is currently crossing the largest sand desert in the world on foot. Wishing them luck!* How about combining travel with creativity? Find your artistic residency (thanks to Michelle for the tip!)Do you like Bytes & Backpacks? A lot? You can buy me a coffee! ☕️Nature ⛰️* More than 100 countries have agreed to reduce emissions at sea. That's good news.* Almost 40 years after the Chernobyl disaster, the closed area is becoming one of the largest nature preserves in Europe.* What does it look like when the world's smallest and largest dogs meet?* Imagine going to a barber in LA and suddenly a coyote drops by for a drink...Unclassifiable 🧠* Does luck exist? Can someone be lucky and someone else simply unfortunate? Scientists rejected this idea for a long time, but then one married a woman who was completely unlucky. What do they think now?* Learn to fold more than just one paper swallow.* Someone bought an old reel in a secondhand shop and it turned out to be a rare Beatles recording.* A Japanese scientist is proving that people can grow a third set of teeth.* Czechs and Slovaks have likely discovered the oldest Mayan city in the jungle.Tips 💡What I'm reading: Wabi sabiWhat I'm listening to: Coastal Soundtrack (Neil Young)What I'm watching: Your Friends & NeighborsInteresting app: Napkin Photo greetings 📷Summer is approaching, and neighbors around us are starting to clear little paths in the meadow from cottage to cottage and especially to the pub...Thank you very much for your support and have a great day! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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10
Bytes & Backpacks #112 🐻
It's starting to get a bit cliché to begin every newsletter with artificial intelligence, but there's no way around it, I apologize. Let's skip what's new in the last 2 weeks, or we'd never get past the introduction. What's resonating most on the internet is the AI 2027 prediction, which "nicely," quite realistically and credibly depicts what Earth will look like in 2035. It will be an interesting planet where humans no longer live. The prediction comes partly from Daniel Kokotaljo, who left OpenAI last year because he stopped believing the organization cared about building safe and responsible artificial intelligence. So did he get offended and is now drawing apocalyptic forecasts as revenge? The troubling thing is that he wrote a prediction in 2021 that's turning out to be fairly accurate...I'm more optimistic, as they say - these predictions are made so they don't become reality. But I won't lie, it's been rattling around in my head for a few days...Business & Technology 👨💻* Google is working on AI that aims to learn to communicate with dolphins. I'm curious what we'll discover...* On the Go European website, you'll find alternatives to American products, from phones to software to jeans and Cola.* What do people use AI for most frequently?* Are we approaching a time when Apple will become a boring company again?* Why will humanoid robots soon be in our homes? Because they can't learn anything in factories.* China is now filing more AI patents than the USA.Travel 🧳* The most colorful places in the world.* Uber released a ranking of the craziest things forgotten in taxis.* Do your feet hurt? Get an exoskeleton for hikers and you can run through mountains like you were young again...* Six days in the Canadian wilderness.Do you like Bytes & Backpacks? A lot? You can buy me a coffee! ☕️Nature ⛰️* Brown, black, blonde. This bear family has style.* Amazing photos of wild animals.* Do you also ask small children how a cat goes? Do you know how it's said in other languages? And for other animals?* Listen to an eleven-year-old boy with autism spectrum disorder who has perfectly learned to mimic the sounds of 50 birds. Wow.* Dogs have a bigger impact on the environment than we thought.Unclassifiable 🧠* An orchestra that plays only on vegetables.* Japan has a new hit. A guy started creating playing cards featuring real neighbors with their abilities.* You buy a house and after a few years you receive a letter from the previous owners... telling you where the secret passages and hidden rooms are.* Got the worst desk at work. Sued the employer. Won.* What is this thing?Tips 💡What I'm reading: Bill Gates - Source CodeWhat I'm listening to: You Are My SunshineWhat I'm watching: Another session of 1923Interesting app: DeqPhoto greetings 📷Things are starting to get nicely green here in Bohemian Switzerland...Thank you very much for your support and have a great day! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #111 🤯
I love technology, innovation, and everything around it. When I was 13 (back in 1994), I started publishing my own magazine called Computer. I think that was the same year when the "big" Computer magazine from CPress started coming out. I bought an issue and found some inaccuracies in one of the articles. I took a piece of paper (yes, I didn't have email or internet yet) and wrote to the editorial office about their mistake. A few days later, I received a letter from the editor-in-chief saying I was right and asking if I wanted to write for them. I didn't refuse. Thanks for that, Pavel!Why am I telling you this? Because I've been passionate about technology since my childhood, spending many (actually more and more) hours each week studying trends and innovations. Lately, I'm almost afraid to look at what's new each morning. So much is happening. AI, robotics, augmented reality, quantum computers, biological computers... I tell you, it's crazy! Exponential growth is here.So if you feel like you can't keep up, don't worry - you're not alone!Business & Technology 👨💻* Robot dogs are getting a bit boring. Robot bees have been around for a while too. How about a robot horse? Or a squirrel?* There's a great guide for startup CTOs on GitHub.* It took me several weeks to (somewhat) understand how a quantum computer works. And now imagine that there are already computers (somewhat simplified) where one of the components is a human brain.* Interested in what happens on the internet every single day?* Imagine wanting to learn how to dance and all you need is for someone to show you once. That's how robots do it. I'm a bit jealous...Travel 🧳* Ales, a wheelchair user from Czechia, is traveling from the Czech Republic to Kyrgyzstan on a handbike, accompanied by his companion Sarka on a bicycle. Now that's what I call a trip.* A new Camino Zadar route has been created near Zadar, and more are appearing across Croatia. Routes inspired by ancient pilgrim paths.* Two guys in New Zealand are walking a long journey dressed as hobbits carrying the Ring and recording funny videos along the way.* 5 train routes in Europe that The New York Times says are worth traveling. * What was served in Wild West saloons?Do you like Bytes & Backpacks? A lot? You can buy me a coffee! ☕️Nature ⛰️* Scientists are gradually discovering that animals are probably much "smarter" than we think. They likely even have a sense of humor.* They built a retirement home for penguins in Boston. Nice, but we could use one too!* An octopus riding on a shark's head in the ocean. Sounds like something from the next Finding Nemo movie. But it's not.* 11 beautiful photos from the new British Wildlife Awards.Miscellaneous 🧠* A camera that doesn't take photos but prints a poem based on the scene it sees. The future is now!* 25 tips for a simpler life. I don't usually like these articles, but this time there are some really interesting hints.* Are we the last generation that needs to know how to read and write? An interesting reflection that sounds crazy, but...* Do you love flight attendant uniforms?Tips 💡What I'm reading: Greek language lexiconWhat I'm listening to: Let Your Horses RunWhat I'm watching: Another session of 1923Interesting app: DeqPhoto greetings 📷My wife ran out of spices for tzatziki, so I headed to the southeast of Peloponnese to restock. I didn't find the spices, but... you'll find out something soon! :-)Thank you very much for your support and have a great day! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #110 🦉
Two weeks ago, I sold all the stocks and crypto from my portfolio. It had quite a big response on Twitter. Why did I do it? Am I afraid of what Trump might still do? Yes. Am I afraid that Trump could eventually be the cause of bitcoin's end? A little. But the main reason is continuing to search for property abroad and my uncertainty about the future development of tech companies. I've always only invested in companies that I at least somewhat understood. In the coming years, several technologies will intersect that could fundamentally change our entire world. AI + quantum computers + robotics + vr/xr/ar (should I write more about this?). And right now, I can't bet on who will win.So we'd rather be warming ourselves somewhere at the end of the world than stressing about American stocks and the geopolitical situation.Business & Technology 👨💻* Duolingo published a book - about their approach to business.* Wifi routers can see people through walls* Scientists have a new device that allows you to taste different flavors in virtual reality. The Matrix is here.* BYD has a drone in the car roof that flies out to show you the way or simply record a nice road trip.Travel 🧳* 36 hours in Kathmandu* Hiking and discovering original pueblo cultures (thanks for the tip, Zbyněk!)* If Apple made a camera, I think it would look something like this.* At New Zealand's airport, the hugging time when saying goodbye is limited to 3 minutes. Only 3 minutes?!Nature ⛰️* We will revive that mammoth one day. For now, we have a mammoth mouse, but that's progress too.* An orange snowy owl appeared in Michigan.* Dogs already have an anti-aging pill.* Peter Ksen creates various home accessories from electronic waste. I want that.* In Egypt, a hyena was seen again after 5000 years.* My friend Petr Juračka went to Antarctica. And that could only turn out like this:Miscellaneous 🧠* Yesterday was Pi Day, so here are Pi clocks.* Is screen time setting not enough for you? Here's an app that only lets you on social media after taking a walk.* His Majesty published a playlist of favorite songs. And if Charles can, so can little old me!* A new trend is trending on social media - hurkle-durkling. Or rolling around in bed in the morning and doing nothing. Finally something useful!Tips 💡What I'm reading: New Wired What I'm listening to: Espaňa Circo Este What I'm watching: Landman Interesting app: Superhuman AIPhoto greetings 📷I've completed another business mission, this time to SXSW in Texas.Thank you very much for your support and have a great day! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #106 🇺🇸
Why the American flag in the title of the last Bytes & Backpacks of 2024? Because on January 9th, I'm flying to Silicon Valley, so if you sense the aroma of sequoias in the next few issues, that's perfectly fine.Across the pond, we want to bring our idea of transforming disabilities into superpowers, our smart Welcomo kiosk (not just) for building access, and we'll explore opportunities in energy, where in Europe we manage field technicians and underground gas storage facilities.Do you know anyone who could help us with any of these areas? I'd greatly appreciate any connections. And if nothing else, please keep your fingers crossed for us! 🤞🙏Business & Technology 👨💻* European Starlink is coming! The IRIS2 project will launch 290 satellites by 2030. I'm quite happy about this because while Elon's technologies are great, they're also politically unpredictable.* New Spectrum is also coming! And they look very interesting. If you don't know what I'm writing about, you're young.* Remember Boston Dynamics' robodog? It cost hundreds of thousands. Well, China is now building something similar that costs thousands.* The FBI would like to have "responsible backdoors" in encrypted apps, a mechanism to access data in "reasonable cases." Actually quite understandable, if we didn't know from history that it will be misused for other cases by the first one who can. And then only an invisibility cloak, which is in development, will help...* Glasses are the next iPhone. For several years, I've thought that smart glasses will relatively soon change our lives. If you can't imagine how it might work, check out Google's video. And that's being very conservative.Travel 🧳* A guy has hidden treasures worth $2 million in several locations across the USA. And you can find them. Now that's traveling!* Don't cycle in winter because it's cold? Check this out, you might then venture out...* Or try crossing the Pyrenees in a camper van.* The Balkans and its mountains. They're among the most beautiful in Europe, but still relatively uncrowded.Nature ⛰️* TikTok's annual carbon footprint is larger than that of all of Greece. One Bitcoin transaction consumes a pool of water, and we'd rather not even talk about the consumption of today's AI models. Still, I see it positively - major tech players and investors are starting to invest heavily in energy because they see we won't get far like this.* In Russia, they released a tiger and tigress into the wild, almost 200 kilometers apart. They still found each other, without GPS and Google Maps...* Ethiopian wolves are pollinating flowers.* Cuddling polar bears.* Photos of horses, birds, or the Moon.Uncategorized 🧠* Next time you're loading a corpse into a car trunk, be careful there isn't a car passing by photographing streets for map data. That's hard to explain away.* Ever wondered where all those lost luggage pieces that never find their owners end up? And what happens to all of it?* A great thread emerged on Reddit where people share their life hacks for various activities.* Organizing a concert in the mountains where you have to hike 3 kilometers to get there. Shame I missed it, must have been amazing...Tips 💡 What I'm reading: Jack Kerouac: Alone on a MountaintopWhat I'm listening to: Paul Cauthen - Black on BlackWhat I'm watching: Blitz Interesting app: Perplexity, because if you have Revolut, you get premium for freePhoto greeting 📸I wish you a peaceful end to this year and may 2025 be as close as possible to your wishes and expectations! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #102 🐺
Some of you may have noticed that one issue of Bytes & Backpacks did not arrive two weeks ago. I apologise for that, my family and I went to Greece for our fall vacation (Santorini at the end of the season and with no people was very nice!) and somehow things didn't work out. The effort was there, but the sun, views, tzatziki, octopus-I have one big change with the new issue. I'll try to make the Bytes & Backpacks a little more concise and divide it into categories. Times are fast and even the lazy ones need help. I wonder if this is better for you or not. Please give me feedback! 🙏Business & Technology 👨💻* OpenAI founder Sam Altman advises how to get the first 100 users for your service.* Years ago, Amazon counted on the Zombie Apocalypse in its operating conditions.* Crypto has been going strong since Donald's election and probably will continue to do so. By the way, Paypal made the first b2b transaction with stablecoin.* Iceland wants to be the first country to generate electricity in space and send it wirelessly down to itself by 2030. Yes, you read that right.* Apple has released a new Mac Mini (among other things). In my opinion, the best desktop computer on the market. I haven't used anything else in combination with an iPad for years.Travels ✈️* The Croatian island of Vis, in my opinion one of the most beautiful places in Croatia with a great atmosphere, popular especially with yachtsmen, probably many of you know it. But not far from Vis is the lesser known isle of Svetac with a rather turbulent history and several settlement attempts.* Some pictures from the flooded Sahara.* In Japan, a brand new Nintendo Museum just opened, and in the Netherlands there is The Corpus Museum, where you can walk through a human body. I had no idea about that.* Pack up the old Defender and head for the Georgia mountains, what a plan!Nature ⛰️* Greece and sustainability? You don't get it? Wrong! The island of Tilos has plans to become the world's first zero-waste island. Fingers crossed.* It seems that alcohol isn't just the privilege of humans. According to scientists, animals also "enjoy" drinking.* A few days ago, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) published a new report on the state of wildlife populations, the Living Planet Report. The numbers are getting scarier. Over the last 50 years, wild vertebrate populations have declined by 73 %!* Everyone starts somehow - even wolves have to learn to howl.Unclassifiable 🧠* Did your dog, cat or horse die and you want it back? The rich spend a lot of money cloning their pets. Interesting and scary at the same time.It's raining, it's pouring, it's falling, it's sh*tting, it's drizzling... We have a number of terms for rain too, but Hawaii leads the way. They have over 200.Tips 💡What I'm reading: Jack Kerouac - Alone on a MountaintopWhat I'm listening to: Paul Cauthen - new album Black on BlackWhat am I watching: Disclaimer This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #101 👓
Glasses, that's what this is all about. Smart glasses. There have been several failed attempts over the years - remember Microsoft Hololens or Google Glasses? But today, thanks to developments in technology, we're slowly getting to the point where it's all starting to work. I myself got a pair of smart glasses from Meta this summer (made by Rayban) and I have to say that it's probably the most usable device yet in the augmented reality field. They can even make dioptric ones, as the glasses themselves don't have any technology in them. All you need is a camera, a microphone and a speaker in the glasses. So you can shoot surprisingly good videos with them, take photos, play music or podcast... And if I hadn't drowned in September on a boat, I'd still be wearing them today :-). But of course the future is in glasses that can project something into the image. Who's working on that, for example?* Meta Glasses* Snapchat Spectacles* Xreal Glasses* Viture* OPPO AirglassBig things will be expected from Google, Microsoft or Apple - I see their Vision Pro as a bit of an exploration of what could be in a "few" years in "normal" glasses. I'm quite curious if we'll all be wearing glasses in 10-20 years. After my experience with Meta glasses, I have to admit that, at least for me, this could be the "next device" that changes the world (like a smart phone). Talking on the phone, listening to music and podcasts, taking photos and videos and having your hands free - it's actually very comfortable and natural. I was surprised by it.You take a trip to the mountains in Canada like that. The locals warn you there are a lot of wolves roaming around. And the fact is. The experience of a lifetime. Except I wouldn't really go out...Here the bears are having fun in the playground again. In Argentina, trees have been cut down and hordes of parrots have moved into the cities. And now the locals don't like it. It's a strange time.In Texas, a new hotel is being built in the desert, completely printed on a 3D printer. In another desert, another "town" is being built. Remember the megalomaniacal Neom project in Saudi Arabia? A 170-kilometre-long noodle of a desert that will house up to 9 million people. Currently, the construction consumes over 20% of the world's steel production.It's a similar glimpse into the future as Tesla's new robot or robotaxi. Only no one really knows how much of it is AI-driven and how much it is controlled by a bunch of Indians in a slum somewhere.But either way, the future finally looks like the future!On the other end of the spectrum is Stage Stoneman, who built a $200 house in California.Maybe it's better to roam the countryside like Carey Kish, 65, who joined the Triple Crown Hiking Club after hiking 3 of the most famous long-distance trails in the U.S. - nearly 13,000 miles in all. Now that's active retirement!2 weeks of camping in the wilderness like in the old days when the USA was first settled.If you're heading to the US, I've got a list of the best hotels to stay in - they're haunted. Or tips on the best small chain restaurants in each state.OpenAI has introduced new Canvas features and ChatGPT is slowly becoming an office suite for document creation. Anthropic, on the other hand, has updated its Claude apps, which work nicely with projects. I use both tools, practically on a daily basis.Mushrooms are said to grow faster when you play noises. Scientists are on it. We have webs that work like Spider-Man's. Some people won't like this - beloved whales eat beloved dolphins.What I'm reading right now: John Muir - My first summer in SierraWhat I'm listening to: A biography of Elon MuskWhat I'm watching: ShrinkingApp that caught my attention: Inbox ZeroThank you for reading and hope you enjoy it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #100 🍾
100 issues published and soon to be 4 years of spending all day every second weekend writing Bytes & Backpacks. What was the beginning? The desire to leave social media, but also the fear of losing touch with my "network".In these hectic times, I appreciate every time I read the Bytes & Backpacks and every e-mail you send me makes me very happy.OpenAI has had the largest investment round in its history - not just its own, it is the largest investment round ever. It raised an additional $6.5 billion, bringing the firm's value to $157 billion. The nonprofit has become a for-profit, spending $300 million a month. Is this a bubble or truly the next industrial revolution? Sam thinks the second one, of course, and he certainly won't be alone. At the same time, OpenAI has introduced a new model that can think much better about the problem. He's just not going to start spouting off the answer right now, but he's going to try to think about everything first (just like a human).What we know for sure is that AI eats a lot of energy. Tech companies are starting to have big problems with their carbon neutrality promises (both Google and Microsoft are pushing back their promises by many years). Big language models just eat energy. Microsoft is even going to buy its own (!) nuclear power plant on the infamous Three Miles Island (yes, the one after the accident) and rebuild it. It just seems now that anyone who doesn't have their own AI won't exist whatsoever. And anyone who wants to have their own AI needs lots of electricity to do it. I mean, a lot of it. We build the technology, provide the power, and then just hand over the reins - because AI is better at most activities than the current corporate bosses. Because some people think humanity has reached its intellectual and physical peak and we're just about to fall into the depths. So we're not starting off on a very positive note this time, are we?Don't despair, there's new research that has found that life after death probably does exist. In fact, some cells can "detach" from a dead body and live on as a kind of "biobot". We spend our whole lives swearing at different kinds of bots, and eventually, we become them.Now something practical. Do you have security cameras in your home? Screw security, security cameras are currently ghost hunting!Or this: Do you still put your clothes on the chairs, too? And does it keep falling off the chair and ending up on the floor? I have a solution for you!Let's have a little laugh about what is going on the animal kingdom. A selection of the best wildlife photos, the most interesting bird photos and the funniest animal pictures. Enjoy.Another app that will (never) change your life (like, ever) is Birthday Weather. Yes, you type in when and where you were born and it tells you what the weather was like. Probably the most useless link in this issue of the newsletter.Or have NASA put your name together from satellite images. As you can see, even NASA is bored...Do you have a problem with longitudinal parking? Before your car can do it on its own, watch this video, there's no better way to explain it.Do you dream of getting an older boat someday? And you are afraid of it? See what it's like to buy an older boat and live in it - in the Arctic Circle. Then buying an older sailboat moored in Croatia will seem like trivial.Tired of big hotel resorts? Try eight of the world's most interesting tiny hotels or a list of great abandoned buildings.Not adventurous enough? Then get inspired by what it's like to head out into the Canadian wilderness without food and try to simply survive.What am I reading: Disrupted: My Misadventure in the Start-Up BubbleWhat am I watching: Tulsa KingAn interesting app: MiddayThanks for scrolling down and hope you look forward to more next time. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Getting a second home abroad - is it a good idea or not?
It's been five years since we acquired a second home by the sea. Although I live in a beautiful place in NP Czech Switzerland in a nice village with a great community, it has always been my dream to occasionally escape to the sea and live there for a while. Not to be confused with vacationing. Simply having a second home.After five years, I'll try to write down some wisdom and, most importantly, experiences. What surprised me, both pleasantly and unpleasantly. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #99 🪼
Cars, we're still dealing with cars. Gasoline? Diesel? Electric? But the much more interesting change in the whole market is happening somewhere else. Waymo's self-driving taxis (owned by Google) have driven over 35 million miles, are operating in several major US cities, and already make over 100,000 trips a week. Completely self-driving, no one sits inside except the customer in the back seat. They have become a major tourist attraction in San Francisco, but more importantly, data shows that they are much safer to ride than humans. They have 84 % fewer serious accidents than human cars. Basically all serious accidents, another (human) was at fault. So we can argue in Europe about whether internal combustion engines should be produced for another 5 years or 50, but in the whole battle we can only see the tail lights of a runaway train. Unfortunately.Luxury is no longer in vogue with the young. The trend is to be sustainable. There are apps behind it again. How you move, how you sleep, what you eat, how you travel, to record everything and understand how to live better. Here's an overview of some sustainable fashion brands.What do scientists say is the healthiest vegetable? Watercress!Proof that there is still plenty of unexplored wilderness in Canada is the story of Joel. He was looking for a campsite on Google maps and came across an undiscovered asteroid crater.Speaking of camping, how about a proper trek in the Himalayas? Or 100 kilometers through Kyrgyzstan? Would you like to see an atom? Here are probably the best quality photos we have so far.And you want to see what it looks like deep in the sea? Like, really deep?Italy is full of abandoned villages. Nowadays, there are no jobs there anymore, so young people are moving to the cities. Sardinia is a great example of what can be done with an abandoned village. They have set up a training centre where they learn how to make good pasta and preserve other traditions. Well done!China has its own AI video generator. And it works very well. You can even try to generate something for free. Just translate the prompt into Chinese. Adobe is also trying to catch this train with Firefly.First data, then crypto, now AI. Data and computing centres are growing like mushrooms after the rain, and so is energy consumption. Recent findings show that the data centre emissions of the big tech players are much higher than reported.Finally, I have 135 compliments for your partner. It's like something out of a Saturday tabloid magazine, but you can never have enough compliments!In our Bohemian Switzerland we are already slowly preparing for autumn...Wait for 100th issue. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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Bytes & Backpacks #98 🦟
Yes, we’ve changed our name from “News from the woods” to “Bytes & Backpacks”. I Hope that you’ll like it! Also, we have a podcast version!Disabled athletes get much less media attention, of course, but my admiration for them is perhaps even greater than for able-bodied men and women. Check out a selection of photos from the BBC.Kids are back at school and parents will be dealing with "screen time" again. Half an hour a day?An hour? Two? An endless quest to find balance. Banning kids from cell phones is a road to hell, spending 3+ hours a day on them is too. It was nothing like that for us, we ran outside and everything was so much better! It's just that the more we find out about the effect of cell phones on kids, the less we know :-). The first time humanity addressed the negative impact of frequent technology use was with books. Then it was the harmful effects of radio, then TV, the internet and now mobile screens. I've been dealing with my kids for the last few years mostly about WHAT they do on screens. Games and social media have a stop sign, education and smart games have a green light. I'll probably write a longer post about that next time, would you like it?And once again, youth. Do you have a problem with them not answering your phone? In fact, 70% of young people aged 18-34 prefer texting to calls. 34% have never even picked up the phone. For the youngsters, the numbers are even more interesting. On the other hand, voice messaging is booming. Remember when you called someone on voicemail and it ate up your credit?Well, okay, we're gradually getting into our more advanced years. Thinking about where to retire? Here's a thought on what countries are best for our retirement. I found a very interesting site that tells you how much longer you will live if you move to, let´s say, Greece. Or anywhere else in the world. And lots of other interesting information. Now that your kids aren't taking your phone, dig into what your old age might look like!My favourite company 1x (OpenAI has invested in it) has launched a humanoid robot for the home. Cooking, ironing, cleaning - the real revolution is coming soon!Have you ever wondered how small the processors in your mobile phone really are? What can you fit into a chip today thanks to technology? There's a very nice video circulating on Twitter. Yes, the line through the processor is a human hair, and then...Photography on film is in vogue again. What's the best thing about analogue photography? That you can shoot almost anything. Like building a camera out of Legos (fingers crossed this set will officially be made) or baking yourself a camera out of gingerbread (thanks for the tip, John).How about a week of walking in Scotland?When all the nature around us is gone, you can download the Earth.fm app and listen to nature sounds from around the world.In Portland, they built a new airport terminal with... a forest! Very nice.Ahh, look - never ending problem of marital cohabitation has an app! Is this still green or already blue? Is turquoise green or blue? Take a test at home and find out how each of you perceives colors, because we all just have it differently."Close the window, light is on, the mosquitoes are coming!" But not at all. Mosquitoes seek out victims primarily by smell and heat (this is nothing new). Now scientists have come up with a few recommendations to avoid getting stung - like loose clothing.There's a new Remarkable out there and it can do colors. If you like to write or draw, there's probably no better device. Also interesting is this mobile phone with an e-ink display or straight Barbie phone - without internet, of course, so Barbie can't get into the human world...I found us a new place to live in Croatia. Peace and quiet, an island of one square kilometer. What more could you ask for! And you know what? My wife doesn't want to go there! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newsfromthewoods.substack.com
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Exclusively upbeat news from the world’s forests, hills and meadows, with a sprinkling of digital minimalism, AI & startups. newsfromthewoods.substack.com
HOSTED BY
by Filip Molcan
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