Gilbert Strang

Gilbert Strang

“An MIT professor taught the same math course for 62 years, and the day he retired, students from every country on earth showed up online to watch him give his final lecture.
I opened the playlist at 2am and ended up watching three of them back to back.
His name is Gilbert Strang. The course is MIT 18.06 Linear Algebra.
Every machine learning engineer, every data scientist, every quant, every self-taught programmer who actually understands how AI works learned the math from this one man. Most of them never set foot on MIT’s campus. They just opened a free playlist on YouTube and let him teach.
Here’s the story almost nobody tells you.
Strang joined the MIT math faculty in 1962. He retired in 2023. That is 61 years of standing at the same chalkboard teaching the same subject to 18-year-olds.
The interesting part is what he did when MIT launched OpenCourseWare in 2002. Most professors were skeptical. They worried that putting their lectures online would make their classrooms irrelevant. Strang did not hesitate. He said his life’s mission was to open mathematics to students everywhere. He filmed every lecture and gave it away.
The decision quietly changed how the world learns math.
For decades linear algebra was taught the wrong way. Professors started with abstract vector spaces and proofs about field axioms. Students drowned in the abstraction. Most never recovered. They walked out believing they were bad at math when they had simply been taught in an order that nobody’s brain is built to absorb.
Strang inverted the entire curriculum.
He started with matrix multiplication. Something you can write down on paper. Something you can compute by hand. Something you can see. Then he showed his students that everything else in linear algebra eigenvectors, singular value decomposition, orthogonality, the four fundamental subspaces was just a different lens for understanding what the matrix was actually doing under the hood.
His rule was strict. If a student could not explain a concept using a concrete 3 by 3 example, that student did not actually understand the concept yet. The abstraction was supposed to come last, not first. The intuition was the foundation. The proofs were just confirmation that the intuition was correct.
The second thing Strang changed was the classroom itself. He said please and thank you to his students. Every single lecture. He paused mid-derivation to ask “am I OK?” to check if anyone was lost. He never used the word “obviously” or “trivially” because he knew exactly what those words do to a student who is one step behind. He treated 19-year-olds learning math for the first time the way he treated his own colleagues. With patience. With respect. With the assumption that they belonged in the room.
For 62 years.
The result is something that has never happened in the history of education. A single math professor became the default teacher of his subject for the entire planet.
Universities in India, China, Brazil, Nigeria, every country with a computer science department, started telling their own students to just watch Strang’s lectures. The University of Illinois revised its linear algebra course to do almost no in-person lecturing. The reason was honest. The professor said they could not compete with the videos.
His final lecture was in May 2023.
The auditorium was packed with students who had never met him before. He walked to the chalkboard, taught for an hour, and at the end the entire room stood and applauded. He looked confused for a moment, like he genuinely did not understand why they were cheering. Then he smiled and waved them off and walked out.
His written comment under the YouTube video of that final lecture was four sentences long. He said teaching had been a wonderful life. He said he was grateful to everyone who saw the importance of linear algebra. He said the movement of teaching it well would continue because it was right.
That was it. No book promotion. No farewell speech. No legacy management.
The man whose teaching is the foundation of modern AI just thanked the audience and went home.
20 million views. Zero ego. The entire engine of the AI revolution sits on top of math that millions of people learned for free from one quiet professor in Cambridge.
The course is still on MIT OpenCourseWare. Every lecture, every problem set, every exam, every solution. Free.
The most important math course of the 21st century is sitting one click away from you. Most people will never open it.”

Nature vs Poison

Weaver Ant Bridges

You think protecting commercial orchards requires pumping millions of gallons of synthetic neurotoxins. But heritage agriculturalists engineered a flawless insect defense grid without a single chemical drop.

Meet the forgotten art of Han Dynasty weaver ant biocontrol. Growers strategically transplanted wild nests of highly aggressive weaver ants. They linked entire citrus orchards together using woven bamboo canopy bridges. This artificially routed the territorial insects directly through vulnerable fruit zones.

The ants relentlessly hunted down and destroyed devastating caterpillars and bugs.

Modern entomological research confirms this self-replicating defense outperforms commercial pesticides.

Chemical sprays poison the soil while the living canopy protects itself.

(Australia has weaver ants, and the species found there is mainly the green tree ant, Oecophylla smaragdina, which occurs in tropical northern Australia, including parts of Western Australia, the Northern Territory, and Queensland.

They are called weaver ants because they stitch leaves together to make nests in trees.)

The Man Who Invented The Digital Age

John Atanasoff

The men credited with inventing the first electronic digital computer filed their patent in 1947. They didn’t invent it.

The official history of the twentieth century is written around a single machine.

It was called ENIAC. It was unveiled in Pennsylvania after World War II.

The press called it a giant brain.

The two men who built it, John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert, became the undisputed fathers of the digital age.

They received the glory. They secured the ENIAC patent.

They formed a company and sold the future.

For decades, every textbook printed in America told the exact same story.

The actual story started six years earlier, in a basement laboratory.

It was 1937. A physics professor named John Atanasoff was tired of calculating linear equations by hand at Iowa State College.

The mechanical calculators of the era relied on gears and ratchets. They were incredibly slow.

Atanasoff wanted a machine that didn’t move.

He got into his car one night and drove two hundred miles across the state line into Illinois, just to escape the pressure of his own laboratory.

He stopped at a roadhouse. He ordered a bourbon.

He pulled out a paper napkin. He wrote down four structural principles.

He mapped out base-two numbers. Electronic logic gates. Condensers for memory. A clock cycle to synchronize the operations.

It was the blueprint for the modern world.

By 1939, he returned to Ames, Iowa. He partnered with a graduate student named Clifford Berry.

They didn’t have a dedicated laboratory. They worked in the basement of the physics building.

With a $650 research grant, they spent two years building something that had never existed before.

They called it the Atanasoff-Berry Computer, or ABC.

It was the size of a large desk. It weighed seven hundred pounds.

It contained more than three hundred vacuum tubes.

It used those tubes for logic operations. It used capacitors embedded in a rotating drum for memory.

Most importantly, it processed binary math—ones and zeros.

At the time, patent law required universities to formally file protections for faculty inventions before they could be shielded from commercial replication. Records show Iowa State College hired a Chicago patent lawyer in 1941 to draft the initial paperwork for the ABC. The college administration, however, never finalized the application. The design remained legally unprotected in the public domain during the exact window it was shared with an outside observer.

In December 1940, Atanasoff attended a scientific conference in Philadelphia.

He met John Mauchly. He casually mentioned his new machine.

Mauchly asked to see it.

In June 1941, Mauchly drove out to Iowa.

This is where the history of technology fractures.

Atanasoff was brilliant at physics, but terrible at self-preservation.

He treated the greatest technological leap of the century like an open academic exercise.

When Mauchly arrived, Atanasoff let him sleep in his own guest bedroom.

He hosted him for a full work week.

Five days in June.

A guest bedroom in Ames.

A 35-page technical manual.

Unrestricted access to the prototype.

The architecture of the digital world, handed over in good faith.

Mauchly took extensive notes. Then he took a train back to Pennsylvania.

Six months later, the United States entered World War II.

Atanasoff left Iowa to design acoustic triggers for naval mines in Washington.

He left his computer behind in the physics building.

Because the military needed the space, the college dismantled the machine.

They threw the vacuum tubes into storage boxes.

In 1943, Mauchly and Eckert began building ENIAC. They did not mention the man in Iowa.

In 1947, they filed the foundational patent for the computer. They did not mention the man in Iowa.

In 1955, they sold the commercial rights to a major corporation. They did not mention the man in Iowa.

By the time the war ended, the Pennsylvania team was on the cover of magazines.

Atanasoff saw the news. He saw the architecture of ENIAC.

It was his binary logic. His regenerative memory.

The stolen credit was absolute.

The men who claimed the future had simply erased the man who drew the map.

For twenty years, Atanasoff said very little. He worked in acoustics. He started an engineering firm.

Then, the corporate world went to war over the rights to the future.

In 1967, a technology corporation called Honeywell sued Sperry Rand, the company that held the ENIAC patent.

Sperry Rand was demanding massive royalties from anyone building a computer.

Honeywell didn’t want to pay.

To break the monopoly, they had to break the patent.

To break the patent, they had to prove Mauchly didn’t invent the machine.

Their lawyers found John Atanasoff.

They spent years tracking down old letters, train tickets, and blueprints.

They reconstructed the exact timeline of the five days in June 1941.

The trial of Honeywell v. Sperry Rand began in 1971 in a Minneapolis federal courtroom.

It was brutal, technical, and exhaustive.

Seventy-seven witnesses testified. The transcripts filled eighty volumes.

Mauchly took the stand. He claimed the 1941 visit to Iowa had no influence on his work.

He insisted the ABC was just a mechanical gadget.

Then Atanasoff took the stand.

He didn’t bring anger. He brought the records.

He produced the letters Mauchly had written him immediately after the visit.

Letters explicitly asking for permission to build an “Atanasoff calculator” in Pennsylvania.

The defense had no answer for the paper trail.

He didn’t ask for a percentage of the future. He just wanted his name on the work.

On October 19, 1973, U.S. District Judge Earl R. Larson issued a 135-page ruling.

The ENIAC patent was officially invalid.

The court’s language was devoid of emotion.

“Eckert and Mauchly did not themselves first invent the automatic electronic digital computer, but instead derived that subject matter from one Dr. John Vincent Atanasoff.”

The ruling was handed down on a Friday.

The following day became known as the Saturday Night Massacre, the political climax of the Watergate scandal.

Every newspaper in America cleared its front page for Washington.

The court ruling that rewrote the history of human technology was buried in the back pages.

The textbooks did not update immediately.

The plaques in Pennsylvania stayed on the walls.

Today, billions of devices operate on the exact binary logic sketched out on a napkin in 1937.

The original machine does not exist.

The physics department threw the last of its parts in the trash in 1948.

John Atanasoff: the professor who drafted the digital age.

Source: Court Records, Honeywell, Inc. v. Sperry Rand Corp. (1973).

Verified via: The Atanasoff-Berry Computer archive at Iowa State University.

Sod and Dung Compost

Sod and Dung Compost

You think building deep topsoil requires buying expensive bags of chemical fertilizers. But heritage farmers engineered the richest dirt on earth without synthetic inputs.

Meet the forgotten art of Plaggen anthrosol engineering. Plaggen (from the German ‘plagg’ for sod) anthrosol (one of the 30 soil groups in the classification system of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Anthrosols are defined as any soils that have been modified profoundly by human activities) engineering means the deliberate creation or modification of soil by repeatedly adding sod, turf, manure, and other organic material over time to build up a fertile, thicker topsoil.

In plain terms, it is a form of human-made soil building used especially in medieval northwestern Europe, where farmers cut sod from nearby land, mixed it with manure, and spread it on fields to improve poor sandy soils.

For Australian conditions, the closest idea is not a natural soil type but a managed system of improving soil fertility and structure through repeated organic additions; the term itself is mainly used in European soil science.

Medieval European builders constantly harvested raw forest sod and concentrated sheep dung.

(In this context, sod means a slice or mat of grass-covered topsoil, with the roots and earth still attached—basically turf that can be cut and laid elsewhere. Relative to Australian English, the closest everyday word is turf rather than “sod”.)

They continuously layered these specific organic materials deep inside massive earthen pits. This deliberate biological fermentation slowly digested the raw matter into thick humus. It created a one-meter-thick layer of hyper-fertile, self-sustaining black topsoil.

This biological earth still outperforms chemical agriculture over a thousand years later.

Chemical powders wash away while this living earth remains forever.

The Hidden Fortress – Star Wars

Misa Uehara

In 1958, Akira Kurosawa made a decision that would ripple through cinema for decades in ways nobody in that era could have predicted.
He owed Toho Studios.
They had backed his riskier, more personal work. Films like Rashomon, which had confused studio executives and astonished the rest of the world. So when Toho asked for something more commercial, more accessible, something audiences would actually come out to see in large numbers, Kurosawa delivered.
He gave them The Hidden Fortress.
It became the fourth highest-grossing film in Japan that year and the most successful of his career up to that point. A rousing, energetic adventure built around two bickering peasants escorting a disguised princess and a disgraced general through enemy territory. Crowd-pleasing in the best sense of the word, without sacrificing an ounce of craft.
The making of it was its own kind of adventure.
Key sequences were shot in Hōrai Valley in Hyōgo and on the slopes of Mount Fuji, where a record-breaking typhoon rolled in and stopped production in its tracks. Bad weather. Delays. A director who was already known for shooting slowly and precisely and refusing to rush.
Toho’s frustration reached a point where the following year Kurosawa formed his own production company, though he continued distributing through the studio. The partnership survived. The tension never fully disappeared.
There is a detail from the production that stays with you.
Misa Uehara, who played the princess, described her first makeup session. Kurosawa walked into the dressing room carrying a photograph of Elizabeth Taylor. He held it up and explained, using that image, exactly what he was looking for in his princess. The precision of the vision. The specificity. A director who knew down to the finest detail what he wanted every frame to look like, including the face at the center of it.
That was Kurosawa.
And then, nearly twenty years later, a young filmmaker in America sat down and watched The Hidden Fortress and something clicked.
His name was George Lucas.
What caught Lucas was a specific technique. Kurosawa had chosen to tell his story through the perspective of the two lowliest characters in it. Not the general. Not the princess. The two peasants, Tahei and Matashichi, bumbling and squabbling their way through a story much larger than either of them understood.
Lucas took that structure and carried it into space.
Tahei and Matashichi became C-3PO and R2-D2. Princess Yuki became Princess Leia. The hidden fortress became the Death Star plans. Lucas has acknowledged the influence openly and without hesitation.
What is less widely known is that his original plot outline for Star Wars bore an even closer resemblance to The Hidden Fortress than the final film did. That earlier draft was eventually reworked and became the basis for The Phantom Menace in 1999.
A film made in 1958 as a commercial favour to a frustrated studio, shot in typhoon weather on the slopes of Mount Fuji, quietly seeded two of the most successful science fiction films ever made.
Akira Kurosawa was trying to repay a debt.
He ended up changing the shape of storytelling itself.

Stop planting flowers around your garden and start planting them inside it.

Most companion planting advice puts the helpful flower in a border or a separate bed. The problem is distance. The scent cloud, the trap effect, and the predator recruitment all weaken sharply past a foot or two. A flower planted twenty feet away from the vegetable it’s supposed to protect isn’t doing much.

The flower belongs in the row. Right next to the stem it’s defending.

Basil between tomato stems is the clearest example. The aromatic oils that confuse pests looking for tomato foliage work as a scent screen — but only at close range. Basil in a border across the garden is too far. Basil planted within a foot of the tomato stem masks the signal where it matters.

The same principle applies to every pairing that works.

Pairings that work when planted close:

– Nasturtiums at the base of each squash hill — soft foliage that pests prefer over squash leaves. When the nasturtium is loaded with aphids, the vine beside it is clean. Replace heavily infested plants mid-season to reset the trap

– Flowering dill or cilantro in the brassica row — the blooms attract tiny beneficial insects that target cabbage caterpillars. Let one or two plants bolt on purpose. The bolted herb is doing its most important work

– Flowering chives in the carrot row — the scent masks carrot foliage from flies that locate carrots by smell. The chives need to be in the same row, not in a pot nearby

– Sunflowers at the end of a bean row — aphids climb the sunflower stem and cluster at the top, drawing them away from bean foliage below. The bean fixes nitrogen that feeds the sunflower. Both benefit

The distance between the flower and the vegetable is the variable that changes whether companion planting works or doesn’t.