Ali Razeghi, a scientist from Tehran, claims to have successfully created a time machine. According to The Telegraph, Razeghi's machine is not a time traveling device in the classic sense. That it, it does NOT transport a person into the past or the future. Rather, it predicts the next five to eight years of the user's life. Razeghi claims that his machine's predictions are 98% accurate.
Razeghi told The Telegraph, "My invention easily fits into the size of a personal computer case and can predict details of the next 5-8 years of the life of its users. It will not take you into the future; it will bring the future to you."
There is no word as to when he plans to make his machine available to potential buyers or how much it would cost.

“The most important thing for India is to develop a well crafted universal basic income plan. This will curb interstate migration, improve access to healthcare, curb population growth, and improve the lives of the backbone of the country, the farmers, who now demonstrate every year for loan waivers after they cannot...

“The UN’s Sustainable Development Goals show us the big problems, so big that they need to become the world’s agenda for education.” – Martin Dougiamas
Martin Dougiamas is the Founder and CEO of Moodle, an open source learning platform. The company was founded in 2002, and since then has grown to have over 100...

“We already have over 60 million games on the Kahoot! platform, most of which are user generated, and we want to encourage content makers to create more content in different formats — which is similar to Netflix’s model.” – Sean D’Arcy
Kahoot’s journey began in 2012, when founders Morten Versvik, Johan Brand, and Jamie Brooker...

“We aim to create inspired design briefs for future-oriented schools developed and supported by the whole organization.” – Lene Jensby Lange
Our world continues to change at a dramatic pace and yet the learning spaces our children spend so much time in have not. Lene Jensby Lange is an entrepreneur, consultant, and...

“I would say that the way the world has reacted to Greta Thunberg, to Malala Yousafzai, to the Parkland Students Organization is symptomatic of our slowly waking up to the fact that the common sense and wisdom of today is coming from below.” – Scilla Elworthy
How can we give people the skills they need to prevent...

“I think that more and more learning happens outside of the classroom in the real world environment solving real-world problems. – Riku Alkio
Seppo is a Finnish company that specializes in game-based learning. Seppo’s gamification platform (called Seppo) is designed for interactive and personalized learning and...

“This project is completely student-created and student-run.” – Lisa Gottfried
Creative problem solving is as important as STEM, and a day-long hack-a-thon based in California is putting the focus on creativity instead of coding. A developer in today’s world needs more than engineering, math and tech skills...
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