Monday, July 13, 2026
Australia is producing much solar power.
Imagine getting three hours of free electricity... every single day.
That's exactly what millions of Australians are now being offered.
From July 1, 2026, households in New South Wales, South Australia, and southeastern Queensland can access at least three hours of free electricity each day through a new initiative called the Solar Sharer Offer.
Why?
Because Australia is producing so much solar power that, during the middle of the day, the grid often has more electricity than it can use.
With more than 4.3 million rooftop solar installations across the country, wholesale electricity prices can even turn negative during peak sunshine hours.
Instead of letting that surplus go to waste...
The government wants households to use it.
During the free electricity window, families can run energy-hungry appliances like:
🧺 Washing machines
🍽️ Dishwashers
❄️ Air conditioners
🚿 Hot water systems
🔋 EV chargers
All without paying for the electricity used during those hours, subject to the plan's daily limits.
The policy also helps the grid by encouraging people to use more power during the day instead of the evening, when electricity demand is highest.
In a time when many countries are struggling with rising energy bills...
Australia is asking a very different question:
What do we do with all this extra electricity?
For now...
The answer is simple.
Mobile phones with replaceable batteries!
Europe is about to force phone companies to make a change millions of people have wanted for years.
Replaceable batteries are coming back.
Starting in 2027, new EU rules will push many mobile phones and portable devices to have batteries that consumers can replace more easily.
That does not necessarily mean every phone will have an old-school removable back like the 2000s.
But it does mean manufacturers will have to design devices so batteries are easier to remove and replace without destroying the phone.
And that matters.
Because right now, when a phone battery gets weak, many people feel forced to buy a whole new phone.
Not because the screen is broken.
Not because the camera is useless.
Not because the phone cannot work.
But because one battery has aged.
Europe wants to change that.
Longer-lasting phones.
Less electronic waste.
More repairability.
Less pressure to upgrade just because the battery is tired.
For years, tech companies made phones thinner, sleeker, and harder to repair.
Now the EU is saying something simple:
If the battery dies, the phone should not have to die with it.
lClosing prisons in The Netherlands!
The Netherlands has closed more than 20 prisons.
Not because they built newer ones.
Not because they ran out of money for guards.
But because there were not enough prisoners to fill them.
Over the past two decades, the Dutch prison population has dropped by more than 40%.
Part of that is linked to falling crime.
But it is also because the Netherlands handles many lower-level offences differently.
Instead of automatically locking people up for long periods, Dutch courts often use community service, suspended sentences, fines, treatment, and rehabilitation.
The idea is simple:
prison should not just punish people.
It should stop them from coming back.
And if someone can be dealt with safely outside prison, the system tries not to turn them into a lifelong inmate.
The result?
Fewer people behind bars.
Lower prison numbers.
And more than 20 prisons closed.
In some countries, overcrowded prisons are seen as normal.
In the Netherlands, empty prisons became the story.
The Aviation world holds a spectacular, high-honor tradition known as the "Water Salute,"!
The aviation world holds a spectacular, high-honor tradition known as the "Water Salute," where massive fire trucks flank a taxiway and spray cascading arches of water over a taxiing aircraft to mark momentous occasions. Far from just a visual spectacle, this ceremonial baptism is reserved for extraordinary milestones, such as a senior captain’s final retirement flight, the maiden voyage of a new aircraft type, or the emotional homecoming of Olympic heroes and fallen veterans. Interestingly, this dramatic custom didn’t originate in the skies; it was actually borrowed from the maritime industry, where powerful tugboats would blast water cannons to welcome famous ocean liners into New York Harbor back in the 19th century.
What makes this tradition even more fascinating is the sheer, hidden complexity behind the curtain of water. A standard salute lasts only about two minutes, yet it requires precision timing and unleashes up to 3,000 gallons of water, demanding absolute coordination between air traffic control and airport fire departments so pilots aren't blinded during taxiing. In drought-prone regions or modern eco-conscious hubs, airports now frequently use recycled water to keep the tradition alive without wasting resources. From welcoming historical figures to bidding a final, emotional farewell to legendary jumbo jets like the Boeing 747, this powerful display remains the ultimate international gesture of respect, turning ordinary airport tarmac into a stage of soaring tribute.
Sunday, July 12, 2026
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