For centuries, money functioned primarily as a medium of exchange, a store of value and a unit of account. Banks moved capital. Ledgers recorded transactions. Financial institutions organised trust through visible structures built around contracts, balance sheets and human judgment. But increasingly, finance is becoming something else.
Inside digital financial systems, capital no longer merely moves through institutions. It moves through infrastructures capable of continuously interpreting behaviour, legitimacy, identity and economic intent.
The future of finance may therefore depend less on who owns the money — and increasingly on who controls the systems that assign meaning to it.
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Photonic chips promise something the electronic era increasingly struggles to deliver: more bandwidth, lower energy consumption and faster signal processing at scale. But beneath that promise sits a physical limitation. As Photonic Integrated Circuits (PICs) become more complex, their components are placed increasingly close together. Signals begin interfering with neighbouring modulators. Tiny disturbances become architectural constraints.
This phenomenon — electrical crosstalk — sounds microscopic. At scale, it becomes systemic. And as photonic systems move from dozens toward potentially thousands of components on a single chip, controlling that interference becomes one of the defining challenges of the next computational era.
A new publication by Bernat Molero Agudo and collaborators now demonstrates something important: DC electrical crosstalk inside Indium Phosphide (InP) photonic chips can be suppressed to the microvolt level.
That is not merely a technical refinement. It is a signal that Europe’s photonic infrastructure layer is becoming mature enough for large-scale deployment.
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For most of modern history, financial trust remained deeply tied to institutions. Banks held deposits. Central banks stabilised currencies. Governments guaranteed legal frameworks. Financial legitimacy emerged through visible structures of authority operating within national economies.
Platforms such as Coinbase represent a different trajectory. Not simply the digitisation of finance — but the emergence of parallel financial infrastructure operating partially outside traditional banking logic.
This is what makes the rise of crypto platforms historically significant. The deeper transformation is not technological alone. It is institutional.
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Bulgaria stands at the intersection of Europe, energy politics and regional history. This portrait explores how infrastructure, demographic decline and institutional tension shape everyday life, revealing a Europe where belonging, modernisation and geopolitical positioning remain deeply interconnected.
Romania is often viewed through outdated assumptions, yet beneath that image lies a rapidly developing country shaped by technology, infrastructure and geopolitical relevance. This portrait explores how digital growth, regional contrasts and strategic positioning are quietly transforming Romania’s role within Europe.
In Latvia, identity is shaped by information resilience and geopolitical awareness. This portrait explores how media influence, digital security and historical memory intersect, revealing a Europe where defending democracy increasingly also means defending shared reality itself.
In Lithuania, identity is shaped by geography and strategic awareness. This portrait explores how security, logistics and geopolitical pressure influence everyday life, revealing a Europe where small states increasingly stand at the intersection of infrastructure, sovereignty and global tension.