Technological advancements have created surplus societies across the globe.
Author: Krish Pillai
As blockchain evolves from digital currency to decentralized finance and asset tokenization, platforms such as XDC showcase how real-world applications are redefining global trade and digital economies.
From blockchain and wallets to mining and volatility, here’s a plain-English guide to understanding how cryptocurrencies work—and why they matter.
As governments regulate and Wall Street buys in, Bitcoin’s future may lie in what it offers beyond price: autonomy, transparency, and a new kind of trust.
From anonymous creators and corporate giants to governments and everyday investors, Bitcoin’s value is spread across the globe, but not in the way traditional assets are.
Best known as the engine behind Bitcoin, blockchain is emerging as a trustless, tamper-proof system with the potential to transform everything from finance to healthcare.
As Bitcoin hits new milestones, this piece unpacks how it works, what drives its value, and whether it stands as a revolutionary asset or a risky speculation.
With adequate checks, balances, and regulations, DeFi may bring a positive revolution in the world of decentralized finance
Blockchain & Artificial Intelligence are the most transformational and disruptive of all new technologies
Blockchain and DeFi are in their infancy and have a long way to perfection
Like the mortgage bubble of 2008, Bitcoins may rapidly go belly-up with a burst.
Potential consequences of unregulated growth of cryptocurrencies will be enormous.
A review of Pavan K. Varma’s recently released book on Adi Shankaracharya.
Russia is both charming and irresistible.
Travel writer R.K. Pillai writes about the memorable two weeks he spent at the Krishnendu Ayurveda Hospital in Alappuzha, Kerala.
Built in the sixteenth century by the Portuguese, Sao Paulo’s current population is around 20 million people, which makes it the largest Portuguese language-speaking city in the world.
Many of the structures in the Burmese city were built more than a thousand years ago.
A UNISCO World Heritage site, the islands are roughly 335 miles off the coast of Brazil.
A great deal of Indian customs, traditions, and religious philosophy found widespread acceptance in the region in the first few centuries of the last millennium.
