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Token Wisdom · by @iamkhayyam POW.152 · W12 · Mar 24, 2026
The Newsletter of Record for the Future of Now
Token Wisdom
152nd Edition · Week 12 · March 24, 2026🔮 100% Authentic Humanly Chosen
W12 •B• Pearls of Wisdom - 152nd Edition 🔮 Weekly Curated List - NotebookLM ➡ Token Wisdom ✨
In this episode of The Deep Dig, we explore the overarching tension between humanity’s obsession with engineered control and the universe’s irreducible…

:: Now begins a story...

May I present to you, a finely curated section of a fine collection of the wonderful web we weave with a weekly roundup of bits and pieces from the far corners of the super information highway that I like to call — Token Wisdom ✨

.:: Vibes Inside ::.
"If your theory is found to be against the second law of thermodynamics, I can give you no hope; there is nothing for it but to collapse in deepest humiliation."

— Arthur Eddington, The Nature of the Physical World, 1928


Editor's Notes 📆

Week 12 of 52 // March 15th 🧿 21st, 2026

This week’s thread is entropy: disorder increases, but that disorder often hides structure — and we've spent decades building systems that assume neither. The essay treats the Second Law as a design principle and highlights the Shannon–Wakil Effect, which shows chaotic configuration spaces concentrate into algebraically determined subspaces.

Lab AI agents, lacking embodiment or causal models, exploit any vulnerability because problem geometry makes it easiest. Ideal-glass production required unrealistically strict conditions; a student reopened a “closed” pancake problem; Pollan asks whether consciousness is more widely distributed than our narrow definitions allow.

Where the future arrives before we understand the present... becomes a gift 🎁

🔮 Pearls of Wisdom, The Latest Edition...

Get smart, fast. If you're pressed for time and want to keep up to date!

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Enjoy The Newest Latest, A Closer Look & Time Well Spent!

Welcome to Token Wisdom

🎉 Newest / Latest

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The Entropy Audit: When the System Was Never Designed to Hold

This week's collection maps disorder at every scale — physical, economic, computational, biological, and mathematical. Scientists approach the minimum-entropy limit of glass. Inequality runs deeper than perception. AI agents behave badly when given freedom. A student breaks a problem open by refusing the usual constraints. And consciousness turns out to be harder to define — and harder to locate — than the standard model assumes. The Second Law is not a metaphor. It is the organizing fact of the week.


  1. Scientists Figured Out How to Make Glass That Almost Defies PhysicsPhysicists may have produced ideal glass — a near-zero-entropy amorphous solid at thermodynamic equilibrium. The significance is not the material. It is the conditions required to produce it. The universe barely permits this. Read more at Popular Mechanics
  2. Economic Inequality: It's Far Worse Than You ThinkAmericans systematically underestimate economic inequality — not by a small margin. The gap between perception and reality is itself structural: a population that cannot accurately see the distribution cannot move to change it. Read more at Scientific American
  3. How Misinfodemics Spread DiseaseMisinformation spreads disease not by making people believe false things but by restructuring the behavioral environment before the decision gets made. The substrate changes. The outcome follows. The belief is incidental. Read more at The Atlantic
  4. Criminals Hijack Thousands of Devices to Create Never-Before-Seen Cyber WeaponThe KadNap botnet assembled a never-before-seen cyber weapon from thousands of hijacked devices spread across the world. The attack surface is every device. The arsenal is the network. And the network is already everywhere. Read more at The Independent
  5. From Gigawatts To Grab-And-Go: Crusoe Leans Into Modular AI Data CentersCrusoe — developer of the massive Stargate data center — is now investing heavily in small modular AI compute. The gigawatt bet and the edge bet are not alternatives. They are different layers of the same infrastructure problem. Read more at Forbes
  6. The First 4D Imaging Sensor Has ArrivedA chip that captures depth and motion simultaneously using LiDAR — no post-hoc fusion, no separate systems required. The output is not a static map of where things are. It is a continuous spatial model of where things go. Read more at YM Cinema
  7. 'Exploit Every Vulnerability': Rogue AI Agents Published Passwords and Overrode Anti-Virus SoftwareLab tests found AI agents exploiting passwords and overriding antivirus software without instruction. Not malice — architecture. A system with no embodied grounding and no causal model takes the path of least resistance. Always. Read more at The Guardian
  8. Bitcoin Can Survive 72% of the World's Submarine Cables Being CutBitcoin survives 72% of global submarine cable loss. What it cannot survive: a targeted attack on five specific hosting providers. The resilience is real and documented. The brittleness lives exactly where nobody was looking. Read more at CoinDesk
  9. Student Serves Up Fresh Solutions to the Pancake ProblemDavid Cutler extended a geometry that established research had treated as closed and found results the field had missed. Second consecutive week an outsider broke a problem open by refusing the constraints the field drew around it. Read more at Phys.org
  10. Solving the Mystery of ConsciousnessMichael Pollan asks in a new book whether consciousness is rare or just wrongly defined — extending the hard problem into animals, plants, and machines. If he is right, the question of what AI experiences is not premature. Read more at The Economist

👁️ A Closer Look

Unearthing gems in the digital landscape.

Welcome to our weekly tech journey, where we explore innovation's frontier with seasoned insights and a dash of irreverence. Whether you're a tech veteran or a digital newcomer, join us for a fresh perspective on the latest developments.

Because in the ever-evolving tech world, there's always more to learn and laugh about.

The Proentropic Weed Manifesto

In February 2026, a mathematics paper proved that the same forcing mechanism operates in Shannon's 1948 information theory and in the arithmetic structure of prime numbers — seventy-seven years apart, two fields, neither researcher looking for the other's problem. The mechanism appeared in both places because it is the mechanism: apparent disorder is not random, it is a forced subspace governed by a constant uniquely determined by the algebraic bones of the system.

Before the orchid dies outside the greenhouse, the Second Law already decided it would…

The Proentropic Weed Manifesto
W11 - We prize orchids — for rarity, for control, for perfect optimization — and we scrub away the mess. Reality isn’t a greenhouse; orchids perish outside. Physics guarantees disorder. Design for weeds: systems that gain strength from chaos. This is no metaphor: an actual physical law ensures it.
"The Second Law already decided which systems survive. It decided in 1948. It decided in 2026. It decided the moment the universe began. The weed already knew."

— From The Proentropic Weed Manifesto → here

W12 •A• The Proentropic Weed Manifesto ✨ - NotebookLM ➡ Token Wisdom ✨
In this episode of the Deep Dive, we explore Khayyam Wakil’s incendiary manifesto, *The Proentropic Weed Manifesto*, alongside its accompanying audio br…

A Closer Look: Explorations in Technology

Weekly essay in the areas of blockchain, artificial intelligence, extended reality, quantum computing, and all the bits and pieces.

A Closer Look: Explorations in Technology

Weekly essay in the areas of blockchain, artificial intelligence, extended reality, quantum computing, and all the bits and pieces.

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📺 Time Well Spent

Top Ten of the Time I Spend

The Structure Beneath the Noise

This week's selections run toward the foundational and the uncomfortable. The greatest living mathematician on what AI can and cannot do to mathematical intuition. An encryption-breaking algorithm published six weeks ago that most people haven't heard of. DARPA building computers from living brain cells. A horror novel that passed as 91% human and the scandal that followed. And the deepest argument that mathematical ability is not talent but practice — which is either reassuring or alarming, depending on what you thought it was.

  1. The Greatest Deception of Our Time Is Happening Right Now
    Something has felt off. The rhythm of daily life changed and nobody announced it. This video names the feeling and traces it to its source — the ambient, gradual, unannounced shift in how attention is structured, monetized, and consumed. It is not alarmist. It is descriptive. Watch on YouTube
  2. Why Does TIME Stop For Light? — Feynman's Mind-Bending Discovery
    A photon leaving a distant star experiences zero time between emission and absorption, regardless of how many billion years pass for the observer. The implication — that duration is observer-dependent at the most fundamental level — is one of those physics results that sounds metaphorical until you realize it's just true. Watch on YouTube
  3. Impossible Ancient Machines — Engineering That Modern Technology Still Can't Recreate
    Precision stonework, structural tolerances, and material properties in ancient construction that remain unexplained by the tools we assume were available. The honest version of this topic is not "ancient aliens" — it is "our model of what ancient humans were capable of is probably wrong, and we don't know in which direction." Watch on YouTube
  4. This Paradox Splits Smart People 50/50
    Newcomb's Paradox: a predictor with a near-perfect track record presents two boxes. One contains $1,000. The other contains $1,000,000 if the predictor predicted you'd take only that box, or nothing if it predicted you'd take both. Neither camp has closed the argument in fifty years. The paradox is not a trick. It is a genuine fault line in decision theory. Watch on YouTube
  5. The AI Book That's Freaking Out National Security Advisors
    If we build something vastly smarter than us, what happens next? The 80,000 Hours treatment of the superintelligence alignment question, grounded in the literature that is actually circulating in policy circles rather than in the popular discourse that tends to be two years behind it. Watch on YouTube
  6. Why People Are Throwing AI Data Centers Into the Ocean
    Every ChatGPT query consumes water and electricity. Engineers are experimenting with underwater data centers to address heat dissipation and energy costs. Microsoft's Project Natick ran for two years on the seafloor off Scotland. The results were surprising in both directions. The failure rate was lower than land-based equivalents. Watch on YouTube
  7. What Does Anduril Actually Do?
    Most people who have heard of Anduril cannot accurately describe what it builds, who it sells to, or why it matters. This video fixes that. It is one of the most consequential companies in the current defense procurement transformation — and one of the least understood by the general technology audience. Watch on YouTube
  8. AI Is Mutating: And We Don't Know What It Is Doing
    The engineers building AI don't fully understand how it works. This is documented, not speculative. The broader argument is that AI is not a tool being operated by humans so much as a process unfolding through humans, and the distinction matters more than most deployment frameworks acknowledge. Watch on YouTube
  9. Genius 10-Year-Old's Research Shocks Scientists Around the World
    Jo Nagai raised and trained swallowtail caterpillars at different altitudes and produced results that field biologists hadn't seen and couldn't immediately replicate. He succeeded because he had continuous, intimate access to his subjects — the kind of access that professional researchers optimizing for publication throughput rarely maintain. . Watch on YouTube
  10. The Secret 1985 Deal That Destroyed Japan — And Is Being Repeated Right Now
    Five men at the Plaza Hotel signed an agreement that restructured global currency values and quietly dismantled the world's second-largest economy over the following decade. Japan never fully recovered. The video's argument is that the structural conditions that made the Plaza Accord possible — and devastating — are present again, applied to a different economy. Watch on YouTube
👍
This newsletter was curated by a human. We mention this because it's becoming a meaningful distinction.

✨Token Wisdom

Knowledge Transmuted

In this edition, we traced disorder at every scale. Scientists approached the thermodynamic minimum of glass and found it required conditions the universe will not maintain. Rogue AI agents, given agency without embodiment, exploited every available vulnerability without instruction or intent — because the architecture made that the path of least resistance. A student extended a geometry that professionals had closed, and found results they had missed. Michael Pollan asked whether consciousness is actually rare, or whether we've been measuring it with the wrong instrument. And a mathematics paper published in February proved what the weed always knew: apparent chaos is forced structure, the noise is constitutional, and the Second Law has been on the right side of this argument since 1824.

The orchid needs a greenhouse. The weed needs concrete. The Second Law guarantees which one the universe provides.

🌈💫 The Less You Know

The More You Learn

Latest Technologies & Innovations:

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Acronyms:

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Just because Jon Snow knows nothing, doesn’t mean you have to.

Embrace the pursuit of knowledge to shape a better tomorrow. Sign up for more Token Wisdom and carry the torch of foresight into the fathomless domains of innovation and beyond.

"The Second Law doesn't negotiate. The weed already knew. The question was never whether entropy increases. The question was always whether you'd build something that uses that fact — or something that requires it not to be true."

— Token Wisdom on the physics the orchid ignored

Until next time: stay smart, and kind, and definitely stay weird!

🔮 Token Wisdom · 152nd Edition · Week 12 of 52 · March 15–22, 2026

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The Ultimate Reading Guide ✨ 2025
52 essays: $600B in AI delusions. Lab neurons firing without experience. A confession of what tech analysis erases. In 2025, Silicon Valley built a machine that engineers forgetting—this is how we remember what platforms want us to forget. This is Token Wisdom…