Shahjahan Kabir Khan
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Inside India’s Silent War With Huawei: How a Digital Giant Became a National Dilemma
One of the world’s biggest markets has decided to take one of its boldest steps — to distance itself from Huawei, the Chinese telecom giant that once powered much of India’s digital revolution.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The Age of Deception: How the World Is Being Prepared for the Rise of the Antichrist (Al-Masih ad-Dajjal)
In a time when the nature of reality seems uncertain—where synthetic intelligence produces false images, deep fakes obscure reality, and potent elites affect perceptions: a big question emerges: Could we be in the foretold Age of Deception described in ancient writings?
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The Great Rewrite: How AI Is Re-Imagining the Story of Humanity
Narrative has underpinned human culture for millennia. From primitive art to literary works, language has been employed throughout history to retain memories, sway views, and define identities. But algorithms are changing this ancient technique of narration for our society rather than authors or historians today.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The Forgotten Sleep: Why Rest Became the World’s Rarest Luxury
2 a. m. A phone screen brightens the dark in a particular location. For only a minute, a tired pupil scrolls social media. Though she has worked two shifts, a nurse finds herself too stimulated to close her eyes. An employee far away responds to the last email, then follows another. In a world never stopping, sleep has become the most underused asset in our present life.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Longevity
Code and Conscience: Can AI Ever Tell Right from Wrong?
When an autonomous car has to decide between slamming a wall or hitting a person, who decides the best course of action? The scheduling, not the person behind the wheel, is to blame. Once entirely under human control, the process of ethical decision-making able to alter people's life now falls to lines. of unknown developers' codes.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The Silence of Nature: How Technology Is Muting the World Around Us
There was a time when quiet wasn't thought of as a luxury. Entering the woods, you could hear the wind rushing through the leaves, the faraway cry of a bird, or maybe the faint noise of water pouring over boulders. That sensation of calmness is uncommon these days, even in the most quiet places on Earth. Above, aeroplanes produce a noise. Mobile devices buzz in our pockets. Cars, drones, and electric barriers all generate perpetual background noise. Real quiet, the kind that allows you to actually interact with the world, has all but disappeared as we have enclosed ourselves with so many noises.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Longevity
The Digital Messiah: What Happens When Faith Meets Artificial Intelligence
When a Texas preacher recently revealed his church's newest assistant, an artificial intelligence chatbot created to aid with biblical interpretation, the throng was speechless. Some were interested; others appeared uncomfortable. The pastor told the congregation, it's really helping me with sermon preparation. Still, it was clear everyone was secretly concerned about if the bot in a quiet, nearly human voice was really saying a Bible verse. Is it a matter of programming now or does it depend on faith?
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
Apocalypse Entrepreneurs: How Fear of the End Became Big Business
Only film directors and prophets were able to exploit the idea of the end of the world previously. It has now become a feasible business strategy. From expensive bunkers hidden in mountains to mobile apps that monitor world catastrophes in real-time, the culture around the end of days has changed. a profitable business that is flourishing.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The Age of Biohacking: Are We Becoming Our Own Experiments?
Once mostly based on labs featuring microscopes, white coats, and significant financial support, scientific efforts now focus on natural settings. Nowadays, these events occur everywhere: in living areas, in workshops, and even in the bodies of individuals. People in the biohacking era merge the realms of self-improvement and self-testing by behaving both as the subjects of their own research and as the investigators.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Longevity
The War for Water: Why the Next Global Conflict Won’t Be About Oil
For over a century, oil has greatly changed the global power dynamics. It has started wars, constructed empires, and defined riches. As global temperatures increase and water resources run out, though, a more muted but still urgent conflict is rising for blue assets instead of black gold.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
The AI Prophets: When Algorithms Start Making Predictions About the End
Once, prophecies came from great summits—a period when visionaries saw fires, floods, and final judgment. Data hubs—articulated not by seers but by computational algorithms—emerge in the present in those forecasts. Artificial intelligence has taken on an odd, nearly prophetic role: our modern messenger of disaster, from foreseeing financial market downturns to projecting crucial worldwide climate thresholds.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
Beyond Longevity: What If Living Forever Isn’t the Answer?
For centuries, humans have searched for the fountain of youth — from alchemists mixing secret elixirs to modern scientists decoding DNA. Today, that ancient dream feels closer than ever. Tech billionaires fund longevity labs. Bioengineers talk about reversing aging. Supplements promise cellular renewal. And yet, amid all the breakthroughs and bold predictions, a quieter question lingers in the background:
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Longevity











