Technology, Politics, Mind. Since 2014.
Watch

Silicon Canals on YouTube

The hidden machinery of money and power — the secret owners, staggering fortunes, and frauds behind the companies and institutions you think you know. Every film is built on court records, regulator filings, and original investigative reporting.

What’s building in

Cities

All cities →

Europe

London

In 1991, Cambridge computer scientists got so tired of climbing two or three flights for an empty coffee pot that they rigged up a grayscale camera — and two years later, their tiny office fix became the world’s first webcam

  1. The Boring Billion is the name geologists give to the stretch between roughly 1.8 and 0.8 billion years ago, when low-oxygen oceans slowed complex life — but evolution did not pause and Earth was not simply a billion years of slime
  2. In 1859, a solar storm now called the Carrington Event pushed auroras as far south as Cuba and induced currents so strong in North American telegraph lines that operators disconnected their batteries and kept sending messages using only the electricity coming out of the sky

North America

New York

A single bolt of lightning that struck across the southern United States in April 2020 stretched 768 kilometres from Texas to Mississippi, a flash so long the World Meteorological Organization had to rewrite its definition of what a lightning strike can be

  1. In 1959, the Soviet Luna 3 probe swung around the far side of the Moon carrying a camera loaded with film salvaged from downed American spy balloons that developed its own film onboard, scanned the negatives with a photocell, and radioed 17 grainy frames back to Earth — the first images humans had ever seen of a hemisphere no one on the planet had ever laid eyes on
  2. Nearly a million wallets have lost $3.8 billion on Trump's memecoin while the president cleared $636 million — and the SEC has formally declared the whole arrangement outside its jurisdiction

Asia

Singapore

In 1944, an IBM machine called the Harvard Mark I clattered through a calculation for the Manhattan Project at three additions per second, fed by paper tape and operated by a young Navy lieutenant named Grace Hopper who took the graveyard shift more often than anyone and slept beside it on a cot, waking the moment the relays went quiet because a silent machine meant something had gone wrong

  1. Nobody talks about the layer underneath physical AI, and the man whose code runs on 6 billion devices just raised $5M to own it before the robot fleets arrive
  2. Goldman Sachs paid $3.9 billion to settle with Malaysia over 1MDB — the bond fees that triggered it were just $600 million

Latin America

São Paulo

In 1816, a 35-year-old French physician named René Laennec rolled a sheet of paper into a tube and pressed it against a young woman's chest because he was too embarrassed to put his ear there, and the sound of her heartbeat through the cylinder became the first stethoscope

  1. A single bolt of lightning that crossed Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi in April 2020 stretched 768 kilometres end to end, once the longest single flash ever recorded and roughly the distance from New York City to Columbus
  2. On September 9, 1947, Grace Hopper's team at Harvard pulled a dead moth out of the Mark II computer's relay, taped it into the logbook with the note 'first actual case of bug being found,' and preserved the page that gave software its oldest metaphor

Middle East

Tel Aviv

Iran wiped Stryker's devices, ShinyHunters defaced Canvas during finals, and DOGE allegedly uploaded every American's SSN to an unsecured server — and the connective tissue between these stories isn't what most analysts think

  1. OpenAI just hired a Transformer co-author and a former Trump AI official in the same quarter — and the pairing is really an IPO prospectus written in personnel form
  2. Inside the Financial Times investigation that took five years and nearly destroyed the reporter who exposed Wirecard

Editorial columns

Our three columns

About the columns →

Technology

Canal Letter

Quantum Systems signed a $1.2 billion round at a valuation of about $8 billion — and one of the investors co-leading it is Airbus, exactly the kind of defense prime the startup's founder says his company could disrupt

The Munich drone maker calls itself a "neo prime" that says it can upend the defense establishment. The establishment just helped write the check — and says its own role is changing.

  1. Booking.com still runs on the internal A/B testing framework its engineers wrote in Amsterdam in the mid-2000s, with no major rewrite since, and at any given moment it is running more than 1,000 live experiments on the same booking page you're looking at
  2. A 35-year-old founder's perfect biomarkers missed a fist-sized tumour, and what Claude caught on his final PET scan — just as his oncologist began discussing radiotherapy near his heart — is the real story about AI in medicine
  3. ASML in Veldhoven ships each EUV lithography machine in roughly 250 crates aboard multiple Boeing 747s, the mirrors inside are polished so finely that scaled to the size of Germany the largest bump would be under a millimetre tall, and every advanced chip in every iPhone on Earth passes through one of these machines before it reaches a pocket
All in Canal Letter →

Politics

Cabinet

Agility Robotics is going public at $2.5B while Figure AI sits at $39B on less proven ground — and the gap between those two numbers is the entire humanoid robotics thesis in one line

Agility Robotics is heading to the public markets at a valuation notable less for its size than for its restraint.

  1. Ford rehired the engineers it replaced with AI — and reclaimed its first JD Power top ranking since 2010
  2. Stockholm's Fika Jobs just raised $4M to kill the resume with AI video interviews — and the part nobody is pricing in is what happens when employers see your face before your skills
  3. Tech layoffs are running 44% ahead of last year while the same companies post record profits and mint new billionaires — and the structural setup is stranger than 2008 because there's no crash to blame
All in Cabinet →

Mind

Field Notes

There’s a reason “I’ll start Monday” keeps working — researchers found people are measurably more likely to hit the gym, start a diet, or set a new goal right after a fresh week, month, or birthday

A 2014 study tracked years of diet searches, hundreds of thousands of gym visits, and tens of thousands of goal commitments and kept finding the same pattern: the urge to chase a goal spikes right after a clean line on the calendar. Here is what that does — and does not — explain.

All in Field Notes →

The Silicon Canals weekly

Undercurrent

Where three streams meet. Each Sunday, one synthesis of the week’s technology, politics, and mind coverage — plus the wider innovation reading we found worth your time.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. We never share your address.