future
Exploring the future of science today, while looking back on the achievements from yesterday. Science fiction is science future.
Pinnacle of evolution
400,000 years ago, since humans invented fire, humans stand as the pinnacle of evolution, treating animals as food and slavery, the earth for the living thing as their resource, and even being overconfident about their status, and creating wars to fight who is the strongest among the same species.
By Curtis Wongabout a month ago in Futurism
Exploring the Vast Universe of Perry Rhodan
I first stumbled upon Perry Rhodan on a rainy Saturday afternoon in a tiny secondhand bookstore in Berlin. I wasn’t looking for it—I was just hiding from the cold—but the neon orange spines on the shelf called to me like a secret. I picked up the first issue and found myself staring at a cover depicting gleaming spaceships, alien landscapes, and a man who somehow looked both heroic and terrified.
By John Smithabout a month ago in Futurism
Choosing a Software Development Company in the UK: What to Look for in 2026
The UK remains one of the world’s most mature and trusted technology markets. From fintech and healthtech to AI-driven SaaS and enterprise platforms, businesses across industries are increasingly relying on external development partners to build, scale, and modernize digital products.
By NextGen Narrativesabout a month ago in Futurism
Nostradamus Predictions for 2026.
Nostradamus Predictions for 2026 Nostradamus remains one of the most enduring names in prophecy. Born Michel de Nostredame in sixteenth-century France, he worked as a physician, astrologer, and writer, a man who turned observation into prediction. His book Les Prophéties has travelled through centuries, its cryptic verses sparking argument and awe in equal measure. Some see his work as poetic philosophy, others as proof that the future leaves shadows long before it arrives. Whatever the truth, his name still rises whenever the world trembles.
By Marie381Uk about a month ago in Futurism
SEBASTIAN TREVARIUS
Sebastian Trevarius lives and works as a APCG (Astroid Prison Colony Guard) which is located near the planet Jupiter. After reading all of Louis L’Amour’s westerns, he opted to have a Time Machine Vacation during the wild west era. Although this type of vacation can be very dangerous, being a guard and quelling prison riots can be equally dangerous—both are deadly—wounded or killed not uncommon. While preparing for his wild west adventure, he had a replica of a Colt Single Action Army Revolver, aka, The Peacemaker manufactured to his specifications. Instead of a single action six-gun, it was semi-automatic and contained 12 bullets. Also, Sebastian didn’t have to carefully aim the weapon, only look at the spot where he wanted the bullet to hit and then pull the trigger. Also, the gun couldn’t be used against him because it had been technically digitized to only recognize his hands. Besides the weapon, his clothes, including his Stetson, boots and holster were tailored to fit his broad shoulders, narrow hips and well-muscled body. He may not look like an actual wild west cowboy, but Hollywood would have loved his piercing blue eyes, thick, wavy blonde hair and chin with a cleft in the centre of it.
By Len Shermanabout a month ago in Futurism
How Pain Clinics Can Seamlessly Transition to EMR
Managing chronic pain is hard enough without paperwork getting in the way. Picture a busy clinic where clinicians scrambling through piles of paper charts, handwritten notes scrawled on clipboards, lost files delaying follow-ups, and billing errors from illegible scribbles. Each lookup or data entry is inefficient and process prone to mistakes. No wonder, practices feel constant pressure to modernize.
By Sergey Laptickabout a month ago in Futurism











