$70 Million for Two Letters?

In today's newsletter:
- $70 million for two letters?
- Contact lenses with secret vision?
- Stop blaming yourself, fix your lighting
Someone just dropped $70 million on a website name.
Not a startup, not a skyscraper, or a cure for cancer. Two letters: AI.com. The buyer? Kris Marszalek, CEO of Crypto.com. Yes, that Crypto.com.
There are only 676 two-letter .com domains in existence. That’s digital beachfront property. And AI isn’t just hype, it’s running hospitals, rewriting jobs, automating offices, and printing money for companies.
Owning AI.com is basically planting a flag on the internet and saying, “This conversation? Mine.” Sounds insane, until you realize digital land in the right spot now costs more than Manhattan.
Contact Lenses With Secret Vision?
Scientists at the University of Science and Technology of China just made contact lenses that let you see infrared light. Yes, Predator mode. No batteries. No wires. Just tiny nanoparticles doing sci-fi stuff inside a soft lens.
In tests, mice reacted to infrared-only light, and humans could spot blinking infrared signals, even with their eyes closed. It lets you detect certain infrared sources in lab conditions.
Infrared is used in military targeting, heat tracking, and medical scans. So if this tech levels up?
Security, medicine, and how we see the world at night could quietly change.
Stop Blaming Yourself, Fix Your Lighting
You’re not lazy, your lighting just sucks.
Bright morning light tells your brain, “Let’s go.” Dim, cave-vibes lighting tells it, “Nap time.” Dark offices kill mood. Sun-starved homes drain energy. It’s biology, not a personality flaw.
That’s why smart shades exist.
They open with the sun, close before glare, and stop blasting your brain at night.
Disclaimer: This newsletter is for informational purposes only. Details may change or come from third-party sources; always do your own research and consult a qualified professional before making decisions.