Monday, June 15, 2026

Trying to see the world!

What oil do you use?

Useful Beetroot leaves!

Jane-gamka-nasha!

Wrap the world with Spider-silk!

Spider silk is one of the strongest natural materials ever discovered, incredibly thin yet capable of holding immense tension. Theoretically, if you could gather around 30 spoonfuls of it and stretch every strand into one continuous line, it could extend far beyond what you’d expect from such a small amount. End-to-end, that silk could be long enough to circle the entire Earth once. It’s a reminder that nature can pack extreme strength and scale into almost invisible fibers. Something that fits in a spoon could, in theory, span a planet.

2-Hours Flight- Tokyo-New York!

The age of 2-hour flights is coming — and Japan is leading the way. JAXA just tested a hypersonic jet that hits 3,800 mph (6,115 km/h), five times the speed of sound. Tokyo to New York in under 2 hours. London to Dubai in minutes. They tested the full aircraft body and engine together at their Kakuda Space Center. Even at 1,000°C outside, the heat shield kept the inside completely normal. The technology works. No passenger flights yet — but Japan is targeting the 2030s. This is no longer science fiction.

Strongman - Latest world record!

The Mountain broke a thousand‑year‑old Viking record. Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson carried a 1,430‑pound log for five steps, a feat that had been a legend since the age of the sagas. The challenge was called the "Viking carry." A 10‑meter‑long log, roughly the size of a telephone pole, was placed across the athlete's shoulders. Björnsson had to walk five steps without dropping the weight. The record was inspired by tales of Viking strongmen who performed similar feats more than a millennium ago. Björnsson trained for months to prepare his back, legs, and core. On the day of the attempt, he wrapped the log in padding, settled it across his shoulders, and took five measured steps. The crowd erupted as the log remained stable. No one had officially replicated the Viking lift in modern times. The feat adds to Björnsson's long list of strength accomplishments, which includes winning Europe's Strongest Man and setting a world deadlift record of 501 kilograms. A former basketball player turned actor turned strongman, he now holds a place in both pop culture and Viking history. Five steps with a log heavier than a grand piano. A thousand‑year‑old legend finally matched by the man who played the Mountain