Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
from sugarrush-77
Think of the most attractive person you know.
Because I am a fucking weeaboo, the first person that comes to mind is an anime character.

It’s so fucking over for me, I know. If she was real, I’d propose to her, immediately. But today, using the example of Kikuri Hiroi from Bocchi the Rock!, I’m going to demonstrate how you can get people to fall over head over heels for you.
On a basic level, we as human beings like it when a person is:
1) a subject of admiration/envy. You see them and think, “I want to be like them.”
2) relatable. You see them and think, “They’re human, and have flaws just like me.”
Having one trait is usually enough to make someone like you, but having both makes you hot.
Let’s take a look at Kikuri. She’s introduced to us in the story first as a comic relief character. She’s really just an impoverished alcohol addict that begs friends for money so she can buy more drinks, and it’s a classic “haha look at that drunk, she can’t walk straight and she’s crazy haha” kind of character. You start to wonder why anybody bothers associating with her, but it’s revealed later in the story that’s she’s the frontwoman for a legendary underground rock band named SICK HACK, and she’s a genius bassist. If you don’t find Kikuri endearing for her flaws, at the very least, you’ll be impressed by her talent. If you like both, then you’ve fallen hook, line, and sinker for what the author intended to be a likeable character.
How you present this contrasting information is important as well. Kikuri is never presented purely as a drunkard, or purely as a genius bassist. The author never presents one side without also presenting the other soon thereafter. When she’s first introduced, you have the main cast of high schoolers being unsure of how to handle Kikuri because she’s so drunk, but then one of the cast recognizes her and says, “Hey, that’s Kikuri, frontwoman of SICK HACK!” When Kikuri is onstage, you’ll see her blackout drunk, but still playing frenetic baselines while crushing her vocals. Then she’ll stop in the middle of the song because she’s so drunk she forgot the lyrics. The author puts Kikuri on the proverbial pedestal, then takes her off the pedestal. When the author takes her off the pedestal, they soonafter put her back on. This alternation confuses the viewer/reader, and that’s good, because the most attractive characters and people are seemingly contradictory, and confusing.
There’s a litany of characters/people that are attractive because of this contrast. Jinx from Arcane is a renowned assassin known for her cunning and cruelty (capable), but is schizophrenic because of a traumatic childhood and estranged relationship with her sister (relatable/pity points/almost justifies her crimes). Keanu Reeves, the Hollywood actor, is incredibly down to earth despite his great success and fame and frequently makes it a point to make a fan’s day (relatable/admirable). But he’s also been the star of genre-defining flicks like The Matrix and John Wick(admirable/capable). The list goes on and on.
So how do you make this part of your life? Easy. If you’re someone with traits that make people admire you (smart, strong, artsy, etc.), show everyone your flaws. If you’re more normal and people can already relate to you more easily, an easy way to make people admire you is to show them something you’re good at. Getting good at something isn’t easy, but you’ll be surprised at how little effort it takes to be good enough at something that people admire you for it.
Afterthoughts:
You can actually expand this admirable / relatable contrast to be more all-encompassing if you play around with it enough. Whether in fictional or real settings, we love people with contradictory traits because the traits create a tension that draws us. We’re left perplexed and curious, thinking “How can one person be both X and Y?” Or “How can one person have all these seemingly contradictory traits?”
The aforementioned formula works great for most situations, but you can actually expand it to be any number of traits that seemingly don’t belong together. We love jerks (mean) with a heart of gold (kind), we love absent-minded professors that are at the top of their field (smart), but know nothing about doing laundry in a way that doesn’t wrinkle their clothes (inept at basic life skills), and Jesus (omnipotent god who needs nothing) who died on the cross for us (loves the human race). The Japanese call this gap moe.
The contrast is easiest to show in fiction or life when you have 2 traits that are seemingly at odds with each other, but you can have more traits than that, it’s just that the balancing act becomes harder. You get a more human-like, real character/person, but it is also difficult to properly show off the contrast in a way that makes sense.
None of this is original, I only rephrased what this guy said: https://youtu.be/0C8DS3aGgDI?si=wFc2_qbcEZYsYoZW
from
Human in the Loop

The promise sounds utopian. A researcher in Nairobi armed with nothing more than a laptop and an internet connection can now access the same computational physics tools that once required a Stanford affiliation and millions in grant funding. Open-source physics AI has, theoretically, levelled the playing field. But the reality emerging from laboratories across the developing world tells a far more complex story, one where democratisation and digital inequality aren't opposing forces but rather uncomfortable bedfellows in the same revolution.
When NVIDIA, Google DeepMind, and Disney Research released Newton, an open-source physics engine for robotics simulation, in late 2024, the announcement came wrapped in the rhetoric of accessibility. The platform features differentiable physics and highly extensible multiphysics simulations, technical capabilities that would have cost institutions hundreds of thousands of dollars just a decade ago. Genesis, another open-source physics AI engine released in December 2024, delivers 430,000 times faster than real-time physics simulation, achieving 43 million frames per second on a single RTX 4090 GPU. The installation is streamlined, the API intuitive, the barriers to entry seemingly demolished.
Yet data from the Zindi network paints a starkly different picture. Of their 11,000 data scientists across Africa, only five percent have access to the computational power needed for AI research and innovation. African researchers, when they do gain access to GPU resources, typically must wait until users in the United States finish their workday. The irony is brutal: the tools are free, the code is open, but the infrastructure to run them remains jealously guarded by geography and wealth.
DeepMind's AlphaFold represents perhaps the most celebrated case study in open-source scientific AI. When the company open-sourced AlphaFold's code in 2020, solving the 50-year-old protein structure prediction problem, the scientific community erupted in celebration. The AlphaFold Database now contains predictions for over 200 million protein structures, nearly all catalogued proteins known to science. Before AlphaFold, only 17% of the 20,000 proteins in the human body had experimentally determined structures. Now, 98% of the human proteome is accessible to anyone with an internet connection.
The two Nature papers describing AlphaFold have been cited more than 4,000 times. Academic laboratories and pharmaceutical companies worldwide are using it to develop vaccines, design drugs, and engineer enzymes that degrade pollutants. It is, by any measure, a triumph of open science.
But look closer at those citations and a pattern emerges. Research published in Nature in 2022 analysed nearly 20 million papers across 35 years and 150 scientific fields, revealing that leading countries in global science increasingly receive more citations than other countries producing comparable research. Developed and developing nations often study similar phenomena, yet citation counts diverge dramatically based on the authors' institutional affiliations and geography.
This isn't merely about recognition or academic vanity. Citation rates directly influence career progression, grant funding, and the ability to recruit collaborators. When scientists from Western developed countries consistently receive higher shares of citations in top-tier journals whilst researchers from developing economies concentrate in lower-tier publications, the result is a two-tiered scientific system that no amount of open-source code can remedy.
At a UN meeting in October 2023, delegates warned that the digital gap between developed and developing states is widening, threatening to exclude the world's poorest from the fourth industrial revolution. Only 36% of the population in the least developed countries use the internet, compared to 66% globally. Whilst developed nations retire 2G and 3G networks to deploy 5G, low-income countries struggle with basic connectivity due to high infrastructure costs, unreliable electricity, and regulatory constraints.
The UNESCO Science Report, published in its seventh edition as countries approached the halfway mark for delivering on Sustainable Development Goals, found that four out of five countries still spend less than 1% of GDP on research and development, perpetuating their dependence on foreign technologies. Scientific research occurs in a context of global inequalities, different political systems, and often precarious employment conditions that open-source software alone cannot address.
The landscape of open-source physics simulation extends far beyond headline releases. Project Chrono, developed by the University of Parma, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and its open-source community, supports simulating rigid and soft body dynamics, collision detection, vehicle dynamics, fluid-solid interaction, and granular dynamics. It's used at tens of universities, in industry, and federal research laboratories. Hugging Face's platform hosts thousands of pre-trained AI models, including IBM and NASA's advanced open-source foundation model for understanding solar observation data and predicting how solar activity affects Earth and space-based technology.
Yet the pattern repeats: the software is open, the models are free, but the surrounding ecosystem determines whether these tools translate into research capacity or remain tantalisingly out of reach.
The LA-CoNGA Physics project offers an instructive case study. Since 2020, this initiative has worked to build computational capacity for astroparticle physics research across Latin America. Nine universities have developed laboratories and digital infrastructure, connecting physicists to global partners through the Advanced Computing System of Latin America and the Caribbean (SCALAC) and RedCLARA. Mexico's installed servers increased by 39.6% in 2024, whilst Chile and Argentina saw increases of 29.5% and 16.5% respectively. Argentina entered the TOP500 supercomputer rankings, and Brazil added two more TOP500 systems.
Yet Latin American researchers describe persistent challenges: navigating complex funding landscapes, managing enormous volumes of experimental and simulated data, exploring novel software paradigms, and implementing efficient use of high-performance computing accelerators. Having access to open-source physics AI is necessary but nowhere near sufficient. The surrounding institutional capacity, technical expertise, and sustained financial support determine whether that access translates into research productivity.
Consider the infrastructure dependencies that rarely make it into open-source documentation. NVIDIA's PhysicsNeMo platform and Modulus framework provide genuinely transformative resources for physics-informed machine learning. But running these platforms at scale requires stable electricity, reliable high-speed internet, and expensive GPU hardware. In sub-Saharan Africa, over 600 million people still lack access to reliable electricity. The proportion of Africans enjoying consistent power has increased by merely 3 percentage points since 2014-2015. Urban grid networks suffer from widespread power quality issues, and Africa's power infrastructure faces frequent blackouts and voltage instability.
A physicist in Lagos running Genesis simulations faces a fundamentally different reality than a colleague in Lausanne. The code may be identical, the algorithms the same, but the context of infrastructure reliability transforms what “open access” actually means in practice. When power cuts interrupt multi-hour simulation runs or unstable internet connections prevent downloading critical model updates, the theoretical availability of open-source tools rings hollow.
Even when researchers have stable power and computational resources, bandwidth costs create another barrier. In developing countries, broadband and satellite access costs are at least two to three times higher than in the developed world. For researchers searching literature databases like PubMed or Google Scholar, the internet meter ticks away, each moment representing real financial cost. When downloading gigabytes of model weights or uploading simulation results to collaborative platforms, these costs multiply dramatically.
A study covering Latin America found that the region spends approximately $2 billion annually for international bandwidth, a sum that could be reduced by one-third through greater use of Internet Exchange Points. There are no supercomputers in East Africa. Researchers struggling to access computational resources domestically find themselves sending data abroad to be governed by the terms and conditions of competing tech companies, introducing not only financial costs but also sovereignty concerns about who controls access to research data and under what conditions.
The bandwidth problem exemplifies the hidden infrastructure costs that make “free” open-source software anything but free for researchers in low-income contexts. Every download, every cloud-based computation, every collaborative workflow that assumes high-speed, affordable connectivity, imposes costs that compound over time and research projects.
Even when researchers overcome computational barriers, publishing introduces new financial obstacles. The shift from subscription-based journals to open access publishing erected a different barrier: article processing charges (APCs). The global average APC is $1,626, with most journals charging between $1,500 and $2,500. Elite publications charge substantially more, with some demanding up to $6,000 per article. For researchers in developing nations, where monthly salaries for senior scientists might not exceed these publication costs, APCs represent an insurmountable obstacle.
Publishers allow full fee waivers for authors in 81 low-income countries according to Research4Life criteria, with 50% discounts for 44 lower middle-income jurisdictions. However, scientists in Kenya and Tanzania report being denied waivers because World Bank classifications place them in “lower middle income” rather than “low income” categories. Some journals reject waiver requests when even a single co-author comes from a developed country, effectively penalising international collaboration.
Research4Life itself represents a significant initiative, providing 11,500 institutions in 125 low- and middle-income countries with online access to over 200,000 academic journals, books, and databases. Yet even this substantial intervention cannot overcome the publication paywall that APCs create. Research4Life helps researchers access existing knowledge but doesn't address the financial barriers to contributing their own findings to that knowledge base.
UNESCO's Recommendation on Open Science, adopted in November 2021, explicitly addresses this concern. The recommendation warns against negative consequences of open science practices, such as high article processing charges that may cause inequality for scientific communities worldwide. UNESCO calls for a paradigm shift where justice, inclusion, and human rights become the cornerstone of the science ecosystem, enabling science to facilitate access to basic services and reduce inequalities within and across countries.
From 2011 to 2015, researchers from developing economies published disproportionately in lower-tier megajournals whilst Western scientists claimed higher shares in prestigious venues. Diamond open access journals, which charge neither readers nor authors, offer a potential solution. These platforms published an estimated 8-9% of all scholarly articles in 2021. Yet their limited presence in physics and computational science means researchers still face pressure to publish in traditional venues where APCs reign supreme.
This financial barrier compounds the citation inequality documented earlier. Not only do researchers from developing nations receive fewer citations for comparable work, they also struggle to afford publication in the venues that might increase their visibility. It's a vicious circle where geographic origin determines both access to publication platforms and subsequent academic recognition.
Access to tools and publication venues addresses only part of the inequality equation. Perhaps the most pernicious barrier is invisible: the networks, mentorship relationships, and collaborative ecosystems that transform computational capacity into scientific productivity.
Research on global health collaboration identifies multiple structural problems facing scientists from the Global South: limited mentorship opportunities, weak institutional support, and colonial attitudes within international partnerships. Mentorship frameworks remain designed primarily for high-income countries, failing to account for different resource contexts or institutional structures.
Language barriers compound these issues. Non-native English speakers face disadvantages in accessing mentorship and training opportunities. When research collaborations do form, scientists from developing nations often find themselves relegated to supporting roles rather than lead authorship positions. Computer vision research over the past decade shows Africa contributing only 0.06% of publications in top-tier venues. Female researchers face compounded disadvantages, with women graduating from elite institutions slipping 15% further down the academic hierarchy compared to men from identical institutions.
UNESCO's Call to Action on closing the gender gap in science, launched in February 2024, found that despite some progress, gender equality in science remains elusive with just one in three scientists worldwide being women. The recommendations emphasise investing in collection of sex-disaggregated data regularly to inform evidence-based policies and fostering collaborative research among women through formal mentorship, sponsorship, and networking programmes. These gender inequalities compound geographic disadvantages for female researchers in developing nations.
Financial constraints prevent researchers from attending international conferences where informal networking forms the foundation of future collaboration. When limited budgets must cover personnel, equipment, and fieldwork, travel becomes an unaffordable luxury. The result is scientific isolation that no amount of GitHub repositories can remedy.
Some initiatives attempt to bridge these gaps. The African Brain Data Science Academy convened its first workshop in Nigeria in late 2023, training 45 participants selected from over 300 applicants across 16 countries. African researchers have made significant progress through collective action: the African Next Voices dataset, funded by a $2.2 million Gates Foundation grant, recorded 9,000 hours of speech in 18 African languages. Masakhane, founded in 2018, has released over 400 open-source models and 20 African-language datasets, demonstrating what's possible when resources and community support align.
But such programmes remain rare, undersupported, and unable to scale to meet overwhelming demand. For every researcher who receives mentorship through these initiatives, hundreds more lack access to the guidance, networks, and collaborative relationships that translate computational tools into research productivity.
The structural barriers facing researchers in developing nations create a devastating secondary effect: brain drain. By 2000, there were 20 million high-skilled immigrants living in OECD countries, representing a 70% increase over a decade, with two-thirds coming from developing and transition countries. Among doctoral graduates in science and engineering in the USA in 1995, 79% from India and 88% from China remained in the United States.
Developing countries produce sizeable numbers of important scientists but experience tremendous brain drain. When brilliant physicists face persistent infrastructure challenges, publication barriers, mentorship deserts, and limited career opportunities, migration to better-resourced environments becomes rational, even inevitable. The physicist who perseveres through power outages to run Genesis simulations, who scrapes together funding to publish, who builds international collaborations despite isolation, ultimately confronts the reality that their career trajectory would be dramatically different in Boston or Berlin.
Open-source physics AI, paradoxically, may amplify this brain drain. By providing researchers in developing nations with enough computational capability to demonstrate their talents whilst not removing the surrounding structural barriers, these tools create a global showcase for identifying promising scientists whom well-resourced institutions can then recruit. The developing nations that invested in education, infrastructure, and research support watch their brightest minds depart, whilst receiving countries benefit from skilled workers whose training costs they didn't bear.
International migrants increased from 75 million in 1960 to 214 million in 2010, rising to 281 million by 2020. The evidence suggests many more losers than winners among developing countries regarding brain drain impacts. Open-source physics AI tools were meant to enable scientists worldwide to contribute equally to scientific progress regardless of geography. Instead, they may inadvertently serve as a recruitment mechanism, further concentrating scientific capacity in already-advantaged regions.
Even if a brilliant physicist in Dhaka overcomes infrastructure limitations, secures GPU access, publishes groundbreaking research, and builds international collaborations despite isolation, one final barrier awaits: the tyranny of institutional prestige.
Research analysing nearly 19,000 faculty positions across US universities reveals systematic hiring hierarchies based on PhD-granting institutions. Eighty percent of all US academics trained at just 20% of universities. Five institutions (UC Berkeley, Harvard, University of Michigan, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Stanford) trained approximately one out of every five professors.
Only 5-23% of researchers obtain faculty positions at institutions more prestigious than where they earned their doctorate. For physics specifically, that figure is 10%. The hiring network reveals that institutional prestige rankings, encompassing both scholastic merit and non-meritocratic factors like social status and geography, explain observed patterns far better than research output alone.
For researchers who obtained PhDs from institutions in the Global South, the prestige penalty is severe. Their work may be identical in quality to colleagues from elite Western universities, but hiring committees consistently favour pedigree over publication record. The system is simultaneously meritocratic and deeply unfair: it rewards genuine excellence whilst also encoding historical patterns of institutional wealth and geographic privilege.
There's a further, more subtle concern emerging from this computational revolution: the potential devaluation of experimental physics itself. As open-source simulation tools become more capable and accessible, the comparative difficulty and expense of experimental work creates pressure to substitute computation for empirical investigation.
The economics are compelling. Small-scale experimental physics projects typically require annual budgets between $300,000 and $1,000,000. Large-scale experiments cost orders of magnitude more. In contrast, theoretical and computational physics can proceed with minimal equipment. As one mathematician noted, many theorists require “little more than pen and paper and a few books,” whilst purely computational research may not need specialised equipment, supercomputer time, or telescope access.
Funding agencies respond to these cost differentials. As budgets tighten, experimental physics faces existential threats. In the UK, a 2024 report warned that a quarter of university physics departments risk closure, with smaller departments particularly vulnerable. Student enrolment in US physics and astronomy graduate programmes is projected to decline by approximately 13% as institutions anticipate federal budget cuts. No grant means no experiment, and reduced funding translates directly into fewer experimental investigations.
The consequences extend beyond individual career trajectories. Physics as a discipline relies on the interplay between theoretical prediction, computational simulation, and experimental verification. When financial pressures systematically favour simulation over experiment, that balance shifts in ways that may undermine the epistemic foundations of the field.
Philosophers of science have debated whether computer simulations constitute experiments or represent a distinct methodological category. Some argue that simulations produce autonomous knowledge that cannot be sanctioned entirely by comparison with observation, particularly when studying phenomena where data are sparse. Others maintain that experiments retain epistemic superiority because they involve direct physical interaction with the systems under investigation.
This debate takes on practical urgency when economic factors make experimental physics increasingly difficult to pursue. If brilliant minds worldwide can access AlphaFold but cannot afford the laboratory equipment to validate its predictions, has science genuinely advanced? If Genesis enables 43 million FPS physics simulation but experimental verification becomes financially prohibitive for all but the wealthiest institutions, has democratisation succeeded or merely shifted the inequality?
The risk is that open-source computational tools inadvertently create a two-tiered physics ecosystem: elite institutions that can afford both cutting-edge simulation and experimental validation, and everyone else limited to computational work alone. This wouldn't represent democratisation but rather a new form of stratification where some physicists work with complete methodological toolkits whilst others are confined to subset approaches.
There's also the question of scientific intuition and embodied knowledge. Experimental physicists develop understanding through direct engagement with physical systems, through the frustration of equipment failures, through the unexpected observations that redirect entire research programmes. This tacit knowledge, built through years of hands-on laboratory work, cannot be entirely captured in simulation code or replicated through computational training.
When financial pressures push young physicists towards computational work because experimental opportunities are scarce, the field risks losing this embodied expertise. The scientists who understand both simulation and experimental reality, who can judge when models diverge from physical systems and why, become increasingly rare. Open-source AI amplifies this trend by making simulation dramatically more accessible whilst experimental physics grows comparatively more difficult and expensive.
There's a darker pattern emerging from these compounding inequalities: what some researchers describe as computational colonialism. This occurs when well-resourced institutions from developed nations use open-source tools to extract value from data and research contexts in developing countries, whilst local researchers remain marginalised from the resulting publications, patents, and scientific recognition.
The pattern follows a familiar template. Northern institutions identify interesting research questions in Global South contexts, deploy open-source computational tools to analyse data gathered from these communities, and publish papers listing researchers from prestigious Western universities as lead authors, with local collaborators relegated to acknowledgements or junior co-authorship positions.
Because citation algorithms and hiring committees privilege institutional prestige and lead authorship, the scientific credit and subsequent career benefits flow primarily to already-advantaged researchers. The communities that provided the research context and data see minimal benefit. The open-source tools that enabled this research were meant to democratise science but instead facilitated a new extraction model.
This dynamic is particularly evident in genomic research, climate science, and biodiversity studies. A 2025 study revealed significant underrepresentation of Global South authors in climate science research, despite many studies focusing explicitly on climate impacts in developing nations. The researchers who live in these contexts, who understand local conditions intimately, find themselves excluded from the scientific conversation about their own environments.
Some initiatives attempt to address this. CERN's open-source software projects, including ROOT for data analysis, Indico for conference management, and Invenio for library systems, are used by institutions worldwide. Rucio now supports scientific institutions including DUNE, LIGO, VIRGO, and SKA globally. These tools are genuinely open, and CERN's Open Source Program Office explicitly aims to maximise benefits for the scientific community broadly.
Yet even well-intentioned open-source initiatives cannot, by themselves, dismantle entrenched power structures in scientific collaboration and recognition. As long as institutional prestige, citation networks, publication venue hierarchies, and hiring practices systematically favour researchers from developed nations, open-source tools will be necessary but insufficient for genuine democratisation.
If open-source physics AI is both democratising and inequality-reproducing, simultaneously liberating and limiting, what paths forward might address these contradictions?
First, infrastructure investment must accompany software development. Open-source tools require computing infrastructure, stable electricity, reliable internet, and access to GPUs. International funding agencies and tech companies promoting open-source AI bear responsibility for ensuring that the infrastructure to use these tools is also accessible. Initiatives like SCALAC and RedCLARA demonstrate regional approaches to shared infrastructure that could be expanded with sustained international support.
Cloud computing offers partial solutions but introduces new dependencies. GPU-as-a-Service can reduce hardware costs, but ongoing cloud costs accumulate substantially, and researchers in low-income contexts may lack the institutional credit cards or international payment methods many cloud providers require.
Second, publication systems need radical reform. Diamond open access journals represent one path, but they require sustainable funding models. Some proposals suggest that universities and funding agencies redirect subscription and APC budgets toward supporting publication platforms that charge neither readers nor authors. Citation bias might be addressed through algorithmic interventions in bibliometric systems, weighting citations by novelty rather than author affiliation and highlighting under-cited work from underrepresented regions.
Third, mentorship and collaboration networks need deliberate construction. Funding agencies could require that grants include mentorship components, structured collaboration with researchers from underrepresented institutions, and explicit plans for equitable co-authorship. Training programmes like the African Brain Data Science Academy need massive expansion and sustained funding. UNESCO's recommendations on fostering collaborative research through formal mentorship, sponsorship, and networking programmes provide a framework that could be implemented across funding agencies and research institutions globally.
Fourth, institutional hiring practices must change. As long as PhD pedigree outweighs publication quality and research impact in hiring decisions, researchers from less prestigious institutions face insurmountable barriers. Blind review processes, explicit commitments to geographic diversity in faculty hiring, and evaluation criteria that account for structural disadvantages could help shift entrenched patterns.
Fifth, brain drain must be addressed not merely as an individual choice but as a structural problem requiring systemic solutions. This might include funding mechanisms that support researchers to build careers in their home countries and recognition that wealthy nations recruiting talent from developing countries benefit from educational investments they didn't make.
Sixth, the balance between computational and experimental physics needs active management. If market forces systematically disadvantage experimental work, deliberate countermeasures may be necessary to maintain methodological diversity. This might include dedicated experimental physics funding streams and training programmes that combine computational and experimental skills.
Finally, there's the question of measurement and accountability. The inequalities documented here are visible because researchers have quantified them. Continued monitoring of these patterns, disaggregated by geography, institutional affiliation, and researcher demographics, is essential for assessing whether interventions actually reduce inequalities or merely provide rhetorical cover whilst entrenched patterns persist.
Open-source physics AI has genuinely transformed what's possible for researchers outside elite institutions. A graduate student in Mumbai can now run simulations that would have required Stanford's supercomputers a decade ago. A laboratory in Nairobi can access protein structure predictions that pharmaceutical companies spent hundreds of millions developing. These advances are real and consequential.
But access to tools isn't the same as access to scientific opportunity, recognition, or career advancement. The structural barriers that perpetuate inequality in physics research, from infrastructure deficits to citation bias to hiring hierarchies, persist regardless of software licensing. In some cases, open-source tools may inadvertently widen these gaps by enabling well-resourced institutions to work more efficiently whilst underresourced researchers struggle with the surrounding ecosystem of infrastructure, publication, mentorship, and prestige.
The geography of scientific innovation is being reshaped, but not necessarily democratised. The brilliant minds in underresourced regions do have better computational footing than before, yet translating that into meaningful scientific agency requires addressing infrastructure, economic, social, and institutional barriers that code repositories cannot solve.
The simulation revolution might indeed devalue experimental physics and embodied scientific intuition if economic pressures make experiments feasible only for wealthy institutions. When computation becomes universally accessible but experimental validation remains expensive and scarce, the entire epistemology of physics shifts in ways that deserve more attention than they're receiving.
The fundamental tension remains: open-source physics AI is simultaneously one of the most democratising developments in scientific history and a system that risks encoding and amplifying existing inequalities. Both things are true. Neither cancels out the other. And recognising this paradox is the necessary first step toward actually resolving it, presuming resolution is even what we're collectively aiming for.
The tools are open. The question is whether science itself will follow.

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Received a call from my cell-phone company (purportedly), some foreign guy with an accent so strong I could barely make out what he was saying. Then spent the following 3-hours trying to make sense of my phone bill. Think I finally figured out what's going on, no thanks to those clowns at T-Mobile.
Prayers, etc.: * My daily prayers.
Health Metrics: * bw= 219.03 lbs. * bp= 147/90 (57)
Exercise: * kegel pelvic floor exercise, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * 05:30 – 1 banana * 06:25 – 2 HEB Bakery cookies * 07:50 – 2 crispy oatmeal cookies * 08:30 – 3 boiled eggs * 09:45 – 2 more HEB Bakery cookies * 10:45 – cottage cheese * 14:00 – 5 hotdogs, saltine crackers
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:30 – listen to local news, talk radio * 05:45 – bank accounts activity monitored * 06:50 – read, pray, listen to news reports from various sources * 13:45 to 14:45 – watch old game shows and eat lunch at home with Sylvia * 15:00 – listening to relaxing music, quietly reading * 16:00 to 19:00 – rec'd a call from my cell-phone company (purportedly), some foreign guy with an accent so strong I could barely make out what he was saying. Then spent the following 3-hours trying to make sense of my phone bill. Think I finally figured out what's going on, no thanks to those clowns at T-Mobile. * 19:30 – listening to relaxing music again, hoping to quiet my mind before bedtime
Chess: * 11:20 – moved in all pending CC games
30 Poems · 30 Reflections · 30 Writing Prompts

from
Larry's 100
Hailing from the enchanted lands of Seattle, Who Is She? is a supergroup of Indie Rockers from bands I don’t know. What I do know is that this platter is a cauldron-brewed mix of jangle pop, sing-songy vocals, and lo-fi production.
What separates this from typical retro la-la-las is sassy, funny lyrics, with songs about witchiness overload, a defense of Anne Hathaway, nostalgia for Movie Pass, and an ode to Marianne Williamson.
The record doesn’t even clock in at 30 minutes. Do you dig labels like Teen Beat, hyper-aware cultural references, and build altars to the divine feminine? Stream it.

#100WordReviews #Drabble #MusicReview #IndieRock #WhoIsShe
from
Larry's 100
About Schmidt, Alexander Payne (2002)
This movie hits differently at 52 than at 32.
In 2002, it was a dull Election follow-up; in hindsight, it matches his Nebraska with its suburban inner-sprawl dread. A bleak movie that sends time running short pings to midlife doldrums. Birth, school, work, death-level dread.
Nicholson gives one of his last great performances, injecting a sneering everyman menace into scenes. Hope Davis at her mousy best, with June Squibb, Dermot Mulroney, Kathy Bates, and Dr. Johnny Fever layering the slow-motion cringe with despair.
Pre-smartphone. Schmidt driving to Rush Limbaugh on AM radio? Quaint.
Need motivation to get going? Watch it.

#100WordReviews #Drabble #FilmReview #AboutSchmidt #AlexanderPayne
from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede
Spannend of Ik hoop er niet dan I?! 't beste van. \ / i I
Over enkele ogenblikken begint de film “Aan de overzijde van het glas” zet voor het beste resultaat de aan u uitgereikte 3D bril op.
i I
. . .
ï Ï
from Douglas Vandergraph
There’s a truth too radiant to ignore: helping others shine will never dim your flame — it multiplies it. That is the heart of this message, and it’s one of the most powerful spiritual principles in the Christian walk.
We live in a time when competition is mistaken for purpose, and envy often masquerades as ambition. But in the Kingdom of God, we were never called to outshine others — we were called to illuminate the world together. When you lift others up, when you encourage them, when you speak life into their calling, your own light becomes stronger.
👉 Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s inspiring faith-based message on YouTube — a powerful talk that reveals how God’s fire grows when we share it.
Jesus said, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” (John 8:12)
That verse establishes the foundation of Christian motivation: our light is not self-made; it’s God-given. Therefore, when we share it, we’re not losing energy — we’re transmitting grace.
According to Bible Gateway, Jesus also told us, “You are the light of the world.” Notice the plural “you.” It’s communal, not competitive. The light is multiplied through unity.
Every act of kindness, every word of encouragement, every celebration of someone else’s success is a spark that joins the greater fire of Christ’s presence on Earth.
God’s Kingdom runs on multiplication, not subtraction.
When Jesus fed the five thousand (Matthew 14:13-21), He began with five loaves and two fish — an inadequate supply — but when it was blessed and shared, it multiplied until everyone was satisfied. That same law applies to encouragement, generosity, and faith.
Your kindness doesn’t deplete you; it activates spiritual multiplication. Paul wrote in 2 Corinthians 9:6-8 that “whoever sows generously will also reap generously.” When you help others shine, you are sowing light, and you will harvest light in return.
High-authority sources like Desiring God remind us that joy deepens when we serve others because God designed us to reflect His giving nature. Serving and encouraging are mirrors of His heart.
Social media feeds, workplaces, and even church circles can create environments of comparison. Many people live as though there’s only one spotlight to stand under. But Scripture teaches otherwise.
Philippians 2:3-4 tells us, “Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of others.”
In a culture of self-promotion, humility is revolutionary. When you celebrate another person’s achievements, you’re declaring that God’s Kingdom is big enough for everyone to shine.
A 2024 Pew Research Center study on faith-based community engagement found that Christians who actively encourage and serve others report higher levels of joy, fulfillment, and spiritual resilience than those focused solely on personal goals. Science keeps proving what Scripture has always said: joy grows through giving.
Throughout the Gospels, Jesus modeled the divine pattern of elevation:
Each story proves that Christ never competed with others. He called out their potential. He wasn’t threatened by their light; He ignited it.
Theologian N.T. Wright describes this perfectly: “Jesus’ power was not about dominance, but about empowering.”
When you empower someone, you mirror Christ’s leadership — one that lifts others, not lords over them.
From a psychological perspective, encouraging others triggers a powerful feedback loop. According to a 2023 report from the American Psychological Association, acts of encouragement and generosity release endorphins and dopamine — the same chemicals responsible for feelings of joy and purpose.
It’s literally built into our biology: God designed us to feel joy when we lift others up.
When you cheer someone else’s success, you’re not only helping them—you’re strengthening your own mental and emotional health. That’s why long-term Christian motivation thrives not on rivalry, but on community.
The Holy Spirit is an endless source of divine energy. When you act under His guidance, you draw from a limitless well of light.
2 Timothy 1:7 reminds us, “For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.”
Love and power coexist. Lifting someone up doesn’t weaken your influence; it validates it.
As Douglas Vandergraph often emphasizes in his messages, the Holy Spirit doesn’t reduce your light when you pour into others—He fans it into a greater flame.
Ephesians 5:8 says, “For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light.”
Light is contagious. When believers act together—encouraging, praying, helping, forgiving—the collective glow of Christ dispels despair and division.
An inspiring commentary from Crosswalk.com notes:
“Being the light of the world means reflecting Christ in every interaction. When we shine together, the darkness has nowhere to hide.”
You are not in competition with your fellow believers; you’re part of a divine network of illumination.
Proverbs 18:21 teaches that “The tongue has the power of life and death.”
Every time you speak encouragement, you breathe divine energy into someone’s soul. Every blessing, every affirmation, every “I’m proud of you” becomes a spark of heaven.
Conversely, words of envy or criticism drain the room of light. As Focus on the Family reminds believers, speaking life is one of the most effective ways to build up the Body of Christ and strengthen relationships.
Your voice can be the difference between someone quitting and someone finding hope again.
Imagine if every church, workplace, and home became a celebration culture—where people compete in honor rather than attention. Romans 12:10 commands us to “outdo one another in showing honor.”
In a culture of comparison, believers are called to become builders of encouragement. Celebration is not flattery; it’s recognition of God’s hand in another’s life.
Practical ways to build this culture:
Publicly celebrate others. Post about someone’s achievement. Tell their story.
Privately affirm. Write notes, send texts, pray blessings over people.
Speak potential. When you see God’s hand in someone, call it out.
Each time you do, you reinforce heaven’s reality on earth: there is room for every light to shine.
In Matthew 28:19, Jesus commanded us to “go and make disciples.” Discipleship isn’t just teaching—it’s transferring light.
The Apostle Paul mentored Timothy, Titus, and many others. He didn’t fear being replaced; he rejoiced in multiplication.
In modern terms, mentorship is spiritual reproduction. When you pour into someone else, your influence doesn’t end — it echoes.
According to Barna Group’s 2023 State of Discipleship Report, believers engaged in mentorship are 48 percent more likely to sustain long-term faith engagement. That’s multiplication in real numbers.
When you invest in others, you develop empathy, patience, and wisdom. It refines your character. God often tests us in how we handle someone else’s success before He promotes us into our own.
Luke 16:10 says, “Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much.”
When you faithfully support another person’s dream, God knows He can trust you with yours.
In Revelation 21:23, we read that the New Jerusalem “does not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light.”
That’s the eternal picture: the entire city illuminated by the glory of God — a collective radiance.
Helping others shine is not temporary; it’s practice for eternity.
When you stand before God, He won’t measure how brightly you stood alone, but how faithfully you illuminated others in His name.
Stay connected to the Source. Prayer, worship, and Scripture are your oil supply.
Surround yourself with encouragers. Proverbs 27:17 — “As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another.”
Serve without seeking credit. Jesus said, “When you give, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing.” (Matthew 6:3)
Guard your heart from jealousy. Gratitude extinguishes envy.
Keep multiplying light. Every day, find one opportunity to lift someone up.
A word spoken today may change a life tomorrow. Encouragement multiplies across time, just as light travels across space — it doesn’t fade; it carries forward.
When you choose to lift others:
This is why Douglas Vandergraph’s teaching resonates so deeply: your flame is part of something cosmic — the Spirit’s fire covering the earth.
Helping others shine will not dim your flame — it multiplies it. The more you pour out, the more God fills you. The more you celebrate others, the more heaven celebrates you.
You were never called to outshine people. You were called to illuminate the world.
Let today be the moment you decide to spread the fire of Christ wherever you go — not by competing for brightness, but by joining the divine blaze of compassion, service, and love.
Douglas Vandergraph
#ChristianMotivation #FaithInAction #LiftOthersUp #LightOfChrist #ServeOthers #BiblicalEncouragement #SpiritualGrowth #ChristianInspiration #KingdomAbundance #FaithBasedLiving
from
Build stuff; Break stuff; Have fun!
For nearly a year I was a Raycast Pro user. With that, I was also able to use their AI features. Sadly it was not so satisfying, because you gained access to models you can use freely on respective sites. Yes, it solved as a proxy to avoid sharing sensitive data, at least I hoped, but I have no verification for this.
But now, I've moved to ChatGPT Plus. I could also use it with Raycast, but the ChatGPT desktop app for macOS looks good and works well. So, why use a wrapper?
Raycast Pro is payable, but besides the AI feature, I’ve only used the synchronization feature. The synchronization was useful for using the mobile app; sadly, it was not what I hoped, so there is no good reason to sync anymore. Only for backups, but this I can do myself.
I’m still using Raycast and love it for what it offers. Only the Pro subscription makes no sense to me anymore.
I will now explore more of what ChatGPT can do for me. I also can give Codex a try. Maybe I'll find time for this to try. :)
54 of #100DaysToOffload
#log #ai #raycast #chatgpt
Thoughts?
Anonymous
So, the bright minds gathered together in D to solve the air pollution problem.
Many average and boring solutions were presented by average researchers and experts in the field like improve the public transport system, tree cover, and blah, blah, blah.
But then some brilliant minds presented two of the best solutions to solve the crisis once and for all:
Sprinkle water near the pollution monitoring centres
Turn off the detection sensors for few hours so that the average is low
The AQI reported is not even in three digits.
It’s in four digits (for the time being).
The AQI measured at 4 am was 751. That’s when the streets are dead and empty. You can imagine the AQI at peak hours.
It’s like smoking 15 cigarettes a day. Irreversible damage to children’s lungs.
from
Larry's 100
58 Second Song opens The Lemonheads' first album of new material in nearly twenty years. It's three minutes and twenty-two seconds. Typical.
Love Chant is as shambling, warm, and weird as their one consistent but mercurial member, Evan Dando. I'm a lifetime member of the Dando Apologists Club, so I'm already lost, but this is a fun, fuzzy batch of '90s Guitar Rock.
The back half of the record swings more than the first, and begins soaring when Juliana Hatfield and Erin Rae harmonize their way into the chorus of Cell Phone Blues.
Reminiscent of the Lovey album. Stream it.

#100WordReviews #Drabble #MusicReview #TheLemonheads #NewMusic2025
from Douglas Vandergraph
Watch the full message on YouTube
God didn’t create you to live an ordinary life. He didn’t craft you for mediocrity, complacency, or survival mode. He created you for impact.
From the moment your lungs filled with air, Heaven assigned you a purpose that Hell cannot cancel. Your life is not a coincidence. Your calling is not a suggestion. You were chosen for greatness — not by human standards, but by divine design.
It’s time to stop thinking small. It’s time to stop waiting for “someday.” Because someday is today.
This message is for every believer who has felt stuck, unseen, or uncertain — the ones who feel like they’re living beneath their potential. You’ve been praying for a sign; this is it. You were made to do big things.
Let’s start with truth — not self-help hype, but Scripture-backed reality.
“For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them.” — Ephesians 2:10 (NKJV)
You are not a mistake. You are God’s workmanship — His masterpiece, intentionally designed to carry out work that He prepared before time began.
That means:
You weren’t created for average — you were created for impact. And impact happens when faith replaces fear.
The world doesn’t need another person blending in. It needs bold believers stepping forward with courage, conviction, and compassion.
The question is: Will you trust God enough to step out of “safe” and into “significant”?
Comfort feels good, but it’s a silent killer of purpose. Faith and comfort never live in the same house.
Every major move of God in Scripture started with a step outside the comfort zone:
None of these people were qualified by human standards. But God didn’t need their credentials — He needed their yes.
You don’t need to be fearless to step into your calling. You just need to trust the One who called you.
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will make your paths straight.” — Proverbs 3:5–6
Every step of faith unlocks new territory of purpose. Every risk you take in obedience opens doors you never imagined possible.
When you stop waiting for perfect conditions and start moving in faith, God multiplies your reach.
Fear is natural — but faith is supernatural. Fear says, “What if I fail?” Faith says, “What if I don’t obey?”
You are not defined by fear; you are defined by faith. The size of your fear often reveals the size of your assignment.
When God places something in your spirit that feels too big, that’s not intimidation — that’s confirmation. He gives you a dream that outgrows your abilities so that you’ll have to rely on His power.
“God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and love and a sound mind.” — 2 Timothy 1:7
Fear paralyzes. Faith mobilizes. You may feel unqualified, but God delights in using the unlikely. That’s His pattern throughout Scripture — and His proof of grace.
Every believer has said this at some point:
But someday is often the enemy of today.
The truth is — there’s no perfect time to obey. There’s only now.
“Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” — Hebrews 11:1
Faith doesn’t wait for comfort. Faith moves first — and clarity follows. You cannot steer a parked car, and God cannot multiply what you refuse to move.
Today is the day to start. Not when you have enough money. Not when you feel ready. Not when people approve. But when God speaks.
When He says, “Go,” your response must be, “Yes, Lord.”
When God sees movement, He releases miracles.
In the story of the feeding of the 5,000, the disciples saw limitation — five loaves and two fish. But Jesus saw multiplication.
He took what they had, blessed it, broke it, and multiplied it. That’s what He does with your obedience. He blesses what you bring — even if it looks small — and turns it into something supernatural.
It’s not your job to perform the miracle. It’s your job to bring the bread.
Your obedience activates His overflow.
So, when you take a step — even a trembling one — Heaven takes a leap.
You cannot walk in divine purpose with halfway faith. Lukewarm belief yields lukewarm impact.
Jesus didn’t live halfway. He didn’t die halfway. He didn’t rise halfway. So why should we live halfway surrendered?
“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” — Philippians 4:13
That doesn’t mean you can do everything — it means Christ in you can. Your potential is not defined by your personality, but by His presence.
Average is safe. But safe faith never changes the world.
The book of Acts is a story of ordinary people doing extraordinary things — not because they were qualified, but because they were filled with the Holy Spirit.
If you want to walk in world-changing power, you must leave average faith behind.
Let’s get practical. Here are seven ways to walk in divine purpose and “do big things” through faith:
Stop giving God your schedule and start giving Him your trust. When you try to control outcomes, you limit miracles. Faith flourishes in surrendered hands.
Your words shape your world (Proverbs 18:21). Start speaking what God says about you — not what fear says. Replace “I can’t” with “God can.”
Who you walk with determines how far you go. Find people who challenge you to grow, not stay comfortable. Faith is contagious — and so is doubt.
Comparison is a thief. You can’t walk in your calling while wishing you had someone else’s. Run your race. Stay in your lane. Trust your pace.
Every answered prayer is a reminder that God is faithful. When you feel weary, look back — He’s never failed you yet.
Big things take time. Seeds don’t become trees overnight. When you plant obedience, patience waters the promise.
Every victory, every blessing, every door — point it back to Him. You were never meant to be the hero of your story; you’re the testimony of His power.
Your calling was never meant to make you famous — it was meant to make God known.
When you shift from chasing platforms to pursuing purpose, you’ll find peace. Impact isn’t measured by numbers, but by obedience.
Sometimes, doing “big things” looks like preaching to thousands. Other times, it looks like comforting one broken heart. The size of the stage doesn’t determine the significance of the calling.
“Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much.” — Luke 16:10
If you’re faithful in the small, God will expand your reach. But He’ll do it in His time — not yours.
The world defines success by fame, followers, and fortune. God defines it by faith, fruit, and faithfulness.
You don’t have to go viral to go victorious. You just have to go where He leads.
When you stand before Him one day, He won’t say, “Well done, you were popular.” He’ll say, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”
The measure of success in Heaven is obedience, not applause.
Even the strongest believers wrestle with doubt. But doubt is not defeat — it’s an opportunity to deepen dependence.
When Peter began to sink walking on the water, Jesus didn’t shame him — He saved him. Your doubt doesn’t disqualify you; it reveals where you need deeper faith.
Pray like the man in Mark 9:24:
“Lord, I believe; help my unbelief.”
That’s honesty. And honesty is where God does His best work.
You don’t have to do big things by your own power. You have divine power living inside you.
“You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you.” — Acts 1:8
The Holy Spirit empowers you to dream big, speak boldly, and live fearlessly. He’s not just your helper — He’s your strength.
When you partner with Him, impossibilities become invitations.
Faith without action is fantasy. The Bible is filled with people who moved.
Noah built. Abraham left. David ran toward Goliath. Esther spoke up. Peter stepped out.
God didn’t bless their comfort — He blessed their courage.
So whatever your “boat” looks like — it’s time to step out.
Jesus said:
“You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden.” — Matthew 5:14
That means you carry illumination everywhere you go. You are Heaven’s strategy for a hurting world.
Your kindness can heal. Your words can rebuild. Your faith can shift atmospheres.
Never underestimate the ripple effect of one obedient life.
Every great purpose starts small. Before David defeated Goliath, he faithfully tended sheep. Before Joseph ruled Egypt, he served in a prison. Before Jesus preached to crowds, He prayed alone in the wilderness.
Faithfulness in the small is the proving ground for miracles in the big.
So if you’re sweeping floors, answering calls, or raising kids — do it with excellence. God sees. And Heaven takes notes.
Satan isn’t afraid of your talent; he’s terrified of your obedience. He doesn’t want you to do big things because every step of faith steals territory from him.
That’s why spiritual warfare often intensifies right before breakthrough. The attack isn’t proof you’re failing — it’s proof you’re advancing.
Keep standing. Keep trusting. Keep walking. The enemy fights hardest when he knows your impact is about to multiply.
This is the divine paradox: the moment you surrender control, you gain influence.
When you trust God with your path, He expands it. When you trust Him with your dream, He refines it. When you trust Him with your voice, He amplifies it.
You don’t have to chase opportunity — let favor find you.
“Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.” — Matthew 6:33
Impact flows from intimacy. When your heart aligns with Heaven, your life becomes a conduit of divine influence.
Doing big things isn’t about spotlight moments — it’s about legacy. It’s about what remains when your name fades.
Legacy is built in daily choices — every word, every act of kindness, every prayer for someone else’s breakthrough.
When you live on mission, your life becomes a living sermon. You’re not just writing history — you’re writing eternity.
You’ve waited long enough. You’ve prayed for signs. You’ve second-guessed your ability. Now it’s time to move.
God didn’t create you for average. He created you for impact. You were chosen for more than comfort, called for more than survival, and equipped to do big things through faith.
Step forward, even if your knees shake. Because your purpose is bigger than your fear, your calling stronger than your doubt, and your faith more powerful than anything standing in your way.
☕ Buy Douglas a Coffee and Support His Ministry
📺 Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube
#DoBigThings #Faith #ChristianMotivation #DouglasVandergraph #GodsPurpose #TrustGod #PurposeDrivenLife #HolySpirit #ChristianInspiration #ChristianLeadership #FaithJourney #KingdomLiving #ImpactForChrist #GodsPlan #SpiritualGrowth #ChristianEmpowerment #MotivationalFaith #JesusSaves #BibleStudy #HopeInGod
Written by Douglas Vandergraph Faith-based speaker, creator, and servant of the Gospel — inspiring millions worldwide to live boldly, love deeply, and walk faithfully in God’s purpose.
from
Larry's 100
Prepare for a dark, dystopian acid trip of a show, mashing up sci-fi allegories and wink-wink nods to a universe of science fiction stories. Based on the Argentinian comic El Eternauta, which debuted in 1957, it was deemed so subversive by the Argentine military leadership that the author, Héctor Germán Oesterheld, and four of his daughters “disappeared.”
The series updates the plot to modern times. The anti-authoritarian rhetoric with a scrappy resistance is as relevant now as it was throughout the twentieth century.
Covertly, also a celebration of middle-aged wisdom and long friendships, adding to the emotional weight. Binge it.

#100WordReviews #Drabble #TVReview #TheEternaut #SciFi #Netflix
from
kinocow

Sitting in a foreign country, I often tune into Telugu cinema for a reminder of the past, just to have the language play passively in the background and the occasional hunt for a good piece of dialogue that I can recycle back into my rusting conversational Telugu. But Telugu cinema of the past years was consistent in its failure of delivering the right amount of dopamine, as with passing time the jarring sexist, macho heavy films just became reminders of a culture that I deeply wanted no association with, to the point of losing respect.
Rahul Srinivas' The Great Pre-Wedding Show was one of the few exceptions, with a focus aimed dead center at the story and characters, weaving an image of rural Andhra Pradesh that will stand the test of time, enough for repeat viewings with guaranteed laughs. It's the kind of movie that I was texting friends and family back home in India about before the midway point as a “must see” and the movie's writing is elevated by it's cinematic deftness (special mention, the editor of the movie Naresh Adupa who manages to squeeze a few laughs in the oddest of places, it's almost magic) and on-point casting.
After this year's smash hit Little Hearts this is the second best Telugu movie of the year, I hope this movie makes enough money to steer some money from the big budget borefests to something more meaningful. There's still hope for Telugu cinema.
#Tollywood #review
from
The happy place
I’m reading MOBY DICK, (it’s written with caps lock on the cover). A book very rich in symbolism; reading it feels like drinking concentrated juice, thinks I.
🧃
Coincidentally, it’s that very same book which Rory Gilmore read — sitting leaning against a lush green tree; so captivated, that when a football came flying close to her head, she didn’t react at all.
I hide the rest because it contains some spoilers maybe from Gilmore Girls
That’s how she won Deans heart. (He’d never seen someone so completely immersed in the reading, so uninterested in his sporting, that it’s absurd how he later becomes disappointed that she doesn’t come watching his games (he wants her to show an interest in his life, but it’s not like he comes watching her studying (when he does, he becomes jealous))).
So that says a lot about a book, thinks I.
And of Rory’s formidable mind.
But I always thought, that Jesse was the best match. Or rather: if I was Rory, he’s who I would’ve picked. But then again not, because if I was Rory then I would’ve done whatever Rory did.
And I can’t change the past; there’s a quote from Gummitarzan ”Rubber-Tarzan” by Danish author Ole Lund Kirkegaard, which reads:
“Jeg er bare en ganske alminnelig mand som ikke kan forandre noget som helst jeg”
Which translates roughly to:
“I am just an ordinary man who cannot change anything at all.”
Which struck a chord in me, I think I remember it was a teacher who said that.
In the book.
from Douglas Vandergraph
Sometimes faith invites us into questions that feel too heavy to ask — questions that stretch the mind and stir the soul.
What if God’s grace is even larger than we imagine? What if love itself never stops reaching, even when everything else has turned away? And what if, at the very edge of eternity, the most shocking truth of all waits to be revealed — that the heart of God is so vast, so merciful, that no one, not even the devil himself, could ever fall beyond the reach of His grace?
This is not a message about rebellion or justification. It is a reflection on the magnitude of mercy, on the unthinkable beauty of love that never stops being love.
📺 You can explore the full message here: Watch The Unthinkable Grace on YouTube
This question may sound impossible, even offensive — and yet, the deeper one dives into Scripture, the more it becomes clear that grace always defies human boundaries.
When the Bible speaks of God, it doesn’t describe a ruler who needs to be feared into obedience. It describes a Father whose love refuses to let go.
The Old Testament shows His patience with a wandering Israel, His compassion for the undeserving, His endless forgiveness for those who turn back. The New Testament reveals that patience in its purest form — Jesus Christ, God’s love made visible, who not only forgives His enemies but prays for them as they crucify Him.
There is a word we use so often that we forget how shocking it really is: grace.
Grace is not fairness. Grace is not leniency. Grace is divine love acting against logic itself.
It is the mystery that says, “You don’t deserve it, but I love you anyway.” It is the voice that calls out even when we have stopped listening.
Grace is the reason Peter was restored after denying Christ. It’s the reason Paul, once the Church’s persecutor, became its most passionate voice. And it is the reason the thief on the cross heard those unthinkable words: “Today you will be with Me in paradise.”
Grace is what makes Heaven possible — and it may also be what makes it eternal.
There is a story in the Gospels that reveals something breathtaking about the nature of Jesus’ compassion.
In Mark 5, Jesus crosses the lake to the region of the Gerasenes, where He meets a man tormented by demons. The scene is raw, violent, chaotic. The man has been chained and left among the tombs, broken and abandoned by society.
When Jesus steps out of the boat, the man runs toward Him and falls to his knees. And then something astonishing happens — the demons inside him begin to speak.
“What do you want with me, Jesus, Son of the Most High God? Swear to God that You won’t torment us!”
They beg Him not to send them into the abyss. They plead to be sent into a nearby herd of pigs instead.
And Jesus listens.
He doesn’t mock them, doesn’t thunder judgment, doesn’t argue. He grants their request.
That moment holds a mystery so often overlooked: even beings that rebelled long ago still recognized the authority of the Son of God, still trembled before His presence, and still knew that mercy flowed from Him like light from the sun.
When He allows their plea, it doesn’t mean He approves of evil — it means His mercy, even in that moment, remained unchanged.
What does that tell us about the heart of Jesus?
It tells us that compassion is not something He turns on or off. It is His very nature.
If the demons could still recognize Him, then mercy had not been completely erased from their memory. If they could still ask for a different fate, it means even they understood that there was still someone to ask.
That scene reminds us that grace, in its truest form, is not about who deserves it — it’s about who God is.
Grace is the current running beneath all of Scripture.
When Adam and Eve hid in shame, grace came walking through the garden, calling their names. When Israel wandered, grace came through the prophets, whispering hope. When the world was lost in sin, grace came wrapped in flesh, walking dusty roads and healing the brokenhearted.
The story of redemption is not about God’s anger being satisfied. It’s about love finding a way back into every heart.
So, if grace could reach murderers, liars, adulterers, and blasphemers… If grace could transform Saul into Paul, the persecutor into the preacher… If grace could stretch from Heaven to a cross — then how far could it really go?
Could it even reach into the depths of Hell itself?
It’s not a question of theology — it’s a question of awe. How far can perfect love reach before it stops being love?
Lucifer’s fall is one of the most haunting stories in all creation. A being of light, radiant and close to the throne of God, he turned inward. Pride clouded what had once reflected the glory of Heaven.
He wanted the throne, not the relationship. He wanted power without surrender.
And so he fell — not because God stopped loving him, but because he stopped loving God.
And yet… the Bible never says God destroyed him. Instead, He allowed him to continue existing, a fallen creature in a fallen world.
That alone is a sign of mercy. Because if God were purely vengeful, Lucifer would have been erased in an instant. But He wasn’t. He remained the Creator even to the fallen, the Sustainer of life even for those who rebelled against Him.
That is not weakness. That is the terrifying strength of love that refuses to uncreate what it once called good.
It doesn’t mean forgiveness has been granted — but it shows that love never stops being love. And if love never stops being love, then mercy never stops flowing.
If we ever doubt how far grace can reach, we need only look at the cross.
The cross is not just a moment in history — it’s the center of the universe. It’s the point where Heaven and Hell collided and mercy stood victorious.
When Jesus cried, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do,” He wasn’t only speaking to those who held the nails. He was speaking to every generation that would follow — every sinner, every doubter, every lost soul who would ever wonder, “Can I still be forgiven?”
The answer was already written in blood.
The cross is where justice bows to love. It’s where sin meets its end and grace begins its endless journey.
Paul wrote in Colossians 1:20 that through Jesus, God reconciled all things to Himself — things in Heaven and things on Earth. That phrase — all things — leaves no room for exceptions.
The cross is proof that redemption doesn’t end where we think it should. It keeps unfolding, wave after wave, into eternity.
When Scripture speaks of the end of days, it says that God will make all things new. Not some things. All things.
That means every broken heart, every shattered soul, every wound left by sin will find its healing in the light of His love.
We don’t know what that looks like. We only know it’s complete.
And perhaps the point is not to determine who gets grace, but to realize that grace itself will be the last word ever spoken.
Maybe God’s ultimate victory isn’t that He destroys evil, but that He transforms everything touched by it.
Because love, real love, doesn’t win by force — it wins by never giving up.
When you think about the depth of grace — when you really let yourself imagine a love that never ends — it changes how you see everything.
You stop measuring yourself by your past mistakes. You stop fearing that you’ve gone too far. You start realizing that grace was already on its way long before you turned around.
If Jesus could listen to the cries of demons, He can hear yours. If He could show mercy in that moment, He can show it in this one too.
You are not too far gone. You are not disqualified. You are not forgotten.
Grace has already found you — it just waits for you to stop running.
Asking whether God could forgive the devil isn’t really about him — it’s about us.
It reveals how limited our understanding of mercy often is. We want grace for ourselves and judgment for others. We want forgiveness for our sin, but punishment for theirs.
But grace is never selective. It’s the flood that rises until everything is washed clean.
That’s why Jesus said, “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” Because divine love doesn’t differentiate — it redeems.
And when we learn to love like that, we begin to understand what grace truly means.
Every morning you wake up is proof of mercy. Every breath is a second chance. Every sunrise is God whispering, “I still choose you.”
Maybe we spend too much time wondering where grace ends, when the truth is — it doesn’t.
The boundaries of grace are as infinite as the God who gives it. Even when we stop believing, grace keeps believing in us.
That’s why Jesus left the ninety-nine to find the one. That’s why He told us to forgive seventy times seven. That’s why He never walked away from anyone who needed healing.
Love doesn’t stop when it’s rejected. Love keeps reaching.
And that’s the miracle of the Gospel — that nothing, not even darkness itself, can silence the voice of grace.
Maybe grace isn’t just what God does. Maybe grace is who God is.
If that’s true, then the question of whether even the devil could be forgiven becomes less about possibility and more about identity — God’s identity.
Because love cannot cease to love. Light cannot cease to shine. Mercy cannot cease to be merciful.
So whether or not that redemption ever happens isn’t the point. The point is that God’s heart has no end.
It means that for you — and for everyone who has ever felt beyond saving — there is still hope. Always hope.
Father, Your love is beyond our comprehension. You reach into darkness and call light out of it. Teach us to see others through Your eyes — not with judgment, but with compassion. Let us never forget that Your grace is our only hope, and that it flows without end. Thank You for the cross, for the mercy that renews, and for the peace that surpasses understanding. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
When all is said and done, the story of the world ends the way it began — with God, and with love.
The question of whether even the devil could be forgiven isn’t about rewriting theology. It’s about rediscovering wonder.
Because if grace could reach that far… it can certainly reach you.
And that means your story — no matter how broken, how painful, or how far it’s wandered — is not over. It’s only beginning.
📺 Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube
☕ Buy Douglas a Coffee and Support His Ministry
#GodsGrace #DouglasVandergraph #Faith #JesusSaves #ChristianMotivation #Grace #Forgiveness #BibleStudy #ChristianInspiration #HolySpirit #Redemption #Mercy #Heaven #Hell #GospelTruth #Hope #Love #SpiritualGrowth #EndTimes #ChristianMessage
Written by Douglas Vandergraph Faith-Based Writer | Speaker | Believer in Unstoppable Grace