For years, photonics has been presented as a technology of the future — elegant, powerful and perpetually just over the horizon. It appears in research agendas and innovation strategies alongside quantum computing and other long-term breakthroughs. As a result, it is still widely perceived as experimental rather than structural.
That framing is becoming increasingly misleading. The renewed relevance of photonics is not driven by scientific novelty, but by a far more pragmatic force: the physical limits of electronic infrastructure. Modern digital systems are no longer constrained by how fast chips can calculate, but by how much energy is required to move data between them — inside servers, across racks and throughout data centers.
At that point, the discussion shifts from performance to physics. Digital infrastructure, ultimately, is a physical system. And every physical system encounters limits — not economic limits, not regulatory limits, but thermodynamic ones.
Read More“The amount of energy required to move data around inside a data center is becoming a larger problem than the computation itself. Optical interconnects are no longer a luxury; they are the only way to break through the ‘power wall’ of modern AI clusters.”
Ian Young
Senior Fellow and Director of Exploratory Integrated Circuits, Intel
Europe has entered an unfamiliar phase of its economic history. Not because growth has collapsed or inflation has spiralled out of control, but because the institution that now speaks most clearly about Europe’s future is not an elected government, not a council of ministers and not the European Commission — but a central bank.
In recent months, the voice cutting through Europe’s economic fog has been that of Christine Lagarde. Increasingly, her interventions no longer sound like monetary fine-tuning. They sound like warnings about direction, capability and time.
Read More“The world will not wait for Europe. Another six years of inaction and lost growth would not just be disappointing; it would be irresponsible.”
Christine Lagarde, President, European Central Bank
I travelled to Eindhoven for a conversation about chips. Not to analyse schematics or count transistors, but to understand what technology truly represents today. In a world where geopolitical power is increasingly exercised through machines, the chip is no longer a technical object — it has become a strategic crossroads.
The interview with Professor Martijn Heck therefore did not begin with a prepared list of questions. That list remained closed. Instead, the conversation unfolded organically, revealing how difficult it has become to maintain perspective. Chips now touch energy systems, security, data flows, defence, education and sovereignty all at once. Anyone attempting to impose order quickly discovers how fragmented the landscape has become.
Halfway through the conversation, Heck raised a fair question: whether I sufficiently understood the technology itself. It was not a test, nor a correction, but a concern. Because speaking about chips without understanding their physics means missing the core. Yet precisely in that moment it became clear what this interview was really about — not the chip itself, but Europe’s position in a world where the United States speaks loudly and China builds quietly.
“Electrons are like a crowd trying to run through a narrow corridor — they collide, generate heat and slow each other down. Photons move through open space. They don’t interact, they don’t heat up and they travel at the speed of light.”
Prof. Dr. Martijn Heck
Professor of Photonic Integration — Eindhoven University of Technology
While the world marvels at data centers and NVIDIA chips consuming electricity equivalent to small cities, a two-year-old sits on the floor of an ordinary daycare. Using no more than a dim household bulb’s worth of energy—20 watts—this child performs feats Silicon Valley can only dream of: learning a language, understanding sarcasm, recognizing a banana, whether drawn, plastic or half-eaten.
We live in a time where technological innovation never pauses. Artificial Intelligence is growing exponentially; algorithms predict our behavior and smart systems make decisions once reserved for humans. Yet… life feels faster but poorer. We have more resources than ever, yet less time, less rest and less meaning. Society seems increasingly individualistic; hidden poverty is on the rise—not only financially but socially and emotionally.
She speaks sparingly, promises little and lets systems do the talking. Margarita Betrard is not a CEO who seeks the spotlight; she engineers control. Not a traditional visionary, but an architect of containment. Since taking the helm at ABN AMRO, one thing has become unmistakably clear: this bank is no longer led by instinct, but by logic, code and legal impermeability.
In the world of medical technology, five giants dominate the landscape: Philips, Siemens Healthineers, GE HealthCare, Medtronic and Johnson & Johnson MedTech. They shape hospitals, diagnostic labs and operating rooms worldwide. But their influence goes far beyond machines and software: their story is one of technological innovation intertwined with human care, navigating governance challenges, mergers and ethically complex healthcare decisions.