Open source wins, jetbridges lose, obscene profits, British musings, Chinese purges—and AI saving lives.
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The power of Open Source
KillerCharts runs the numbers: the largest, most durable companies are built on open frameworks. Why build on anything else?
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Frontier doubles down: no jetbridges
LinkedIn chatter points to a glaring gap: wheelchairs. Cutting costs is one thing—accessibility is another.
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Qantas’s obscene profits
Tony Webber calls it: the group’s FY25 results are record-breaking, and not in a way that flatters public perception.
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British perspective on travel
A sharp, thoughtful opinion piece. Sometimes it takes a U.K. angle to cut through the noise.
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China’s nuclear purge
Intelligence Online highlights the consolidation of power: spying, betrayals, and mass firings in China’s nuclear force. Travel may seem far away, but geopolitics has a way of catching up.
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Quirky: AI aids stroke survival
The Times reports diagnostic software that significantly improves survival and recovery odds for stroke patients. Quirky, yes—but also profoundly useful.
📣 Don’t forget:
The Professor’s Minute Minute → https://tinyurl.com/ynvpddfw
The OFFICIAL Professor Sabena Blog → https://tinyurl.com/j9x8cmhm
Explore the old archive → https://tinyurl.com/njj9z6p4
#Tags:
#Travel #Aviation #Airlines #Tourism #OpenSource #Frontier #Accessibility #Qantas #Profits #UK #China #Geopolitics #AI #HealthTech #QuirkyTravel #Picasso
Picasso Style Note: The day blends corporate power, accessibility failures, extreme profits, geopolitics, and life-saving AI. A good fit for Surrealist Picasso — exaggerated, dreamlike forms where contradictions coexist uneasily.
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