• low angle photography of beige building

    Law After the Prompt

    Saturday, April 18, 2026

    Artificial intelligence is transforming legal work, but not legal judgment. As analysis and drafting become automated, the core of law remains human—requiring interpretation, responsibility and the ability to justify decisions under conditions of uncertainty.

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  • Designing the Self

    Friday, April 17, 2026

    In digital environments, identity is increasingly shaped by design. From interfaces and avatars to algorithmic aesthetics, the self is no longer simply expressed but constructed—raising new questions about agency, authenticity and how we see ourselves.

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  • a sign that is on the side of a hill

    What Should Students Still Learn?

    Friday, April 17, 2026

    As artificial intelligence generates answers instantly, education must shift from knowledge to judgment. This essay explores how universities should redesign curricula to focus on problem definition, critical thinking and responsibility in an age where knowing is no longer enough.

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  • Europe’s Invisible Risk

    Wednesday, April 15, 2026

    As AI reshapes enterprise systems, Europe risks losing more than a company. It risks losing control over the logic that structures decisions—quietly shifting sovereignty from visible infrastructure to the invisible layer where economic behavior is defined.

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  • The Painful Transition

    Wednesday, April 15, 2026

    As AI reshapes work, the disruption is not only structural but personal. Control becomes distant, understanding fades and professional identity shifts—leaving individuals navigating systems that still depend on them, yet no longer fully reflect their role or expertise.

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  • The Blueprint Economy

    Tuesday, April 14, 2026

    Enterprise systems no longer just support organizations—they define how they operate. As SAP standardizes processes across Europe, a shared logic emerges, shaping decisions, limiting variation and quietly structuring the economic reality beneath visible strategy and control.

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  • Europe Has Missions — But Do Markets Follow?

    Monday, April 13, 2026

    Europe defines bold missions, from climate to chips. Yet capital follows a different logic. This analysis explores the growing “translation gap” between public ambition and private investment—and why Europe’s future depends on closing it.

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  • The Traffic Question

    Thursday, April 9, 2026

    A handful of platforms generate most of Europe’s data traffic, while telecom operators carry the cost of the infrastructure behind it. As networks scale toward 6G, the imbalance between usage, investment and value becomes harder to ignore.

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  • Brainport Rising — Special: The European Chip ...

    Tuesday, April 7, 2026

    Europe’s semiconductor future may not lie in a single champion, but in a system. As a new chip stack emerges across compute, sensing, manufacturing and connectivity, the real question becomes whether Europe can recognise — and organise — its own architecture.

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  • grayscale photography of books on shelf

    The Promise of Project Beethoven

    Saturday, April 4, 2026

    Project Beethoven marks a turning point for Brainport Eindhoven, as billions in public investment aim to scale Europe’s semiconductor ecosystem. But behind the momentum lies a deeper question: is this true acceleration — or a late response to growing global dependency?

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Society & Culture

About us

Altair Media Europe explores the systems shaping modern societies — from infrastructure and governance to culture and technological change.
📍 Based in The Netherlands – with contributors across Europe
✉️ Contact: info@altairmedia.eu