
🍕₿ TODAY IN HISTORY – May 22, 2010
On this day, Laszlo Hanyecz made the first recorded commercial transaction using Bitcoin, trading 10,000 BTC for two Papa John’s pizzas.
Learn something new every day — a concept, an idea, a mindset shift. Small daily upgrades = big transformations.
It’s not magic. It’s exponential growth.

On this day, Laszlo Hanyecz made the first recorded commercial transaction using Bitcoin, trading 10,000 BTC for two Papa John’s pizzas.

The premiere of Matrix in Brazilian theaters wasn’t just a movie. It was like a code drop into pop culture.

On that day, Thomas Edison dropped the cinetoscope on the world: a little box with a window where the future peeked back at you.

On that day, Albert Einstein dropped his thesis on the Theory of Relativity, a concept so mind-blowing that classical physics just looked down and was like, “Yeah… I’m totally out of the game.”

It was on that day, during the 25th anniversary special of Motown, that the King of Pop made history. Michael Jackson debuted the Moonwalk. The rest? It’s like an eternal slow-mo replay.

On May 13, 1985, Dire Straits dropped Brothers in Arms — one of the first albums fully recorded in digital technology.
On May 9, 1962, physicist Theodore Maiman got the patent for the world’s first laser, the Ruby Laser.

A pharmacist had an idea. He mixed syrup with sparkling water… and accidentally created the most famous soda on the planet.

On April 30, 1938, a kinda crazy rabbit with a mischievous look and a tongue sharper than a BBB edit was born—or like, almost born—the icon that would totally redefine animated humor:
🐇 “Happy Rabbit,” the prototype for Bugs Bunny, made his debut in a Warner Bros. short called Porky’s Hare Hunt.

🚀 On April 28, 2003, the iTunes Store was born.
Over 200,000 songs available legally online.
While the world was getting used to boring PowerPoint presentations and sleepy coffee breaks, something different popped up: the Stream Unconference — an event where nobody’s just an audience and everyone can take the stage.
Most people still think blockchain is just about crypto. But honestly, it’s all about trust. It’s the first digital system made to record stuff without needing to trust anyone—just the code. 💡 So why does this matter for the Creative Economy? Because blockchain is changing what it means to be a creator: it lets you register digital ownership without middlemen. Artists can get automatic royalties. It makes sure that art, design, video, or music has a unique and traceable identity. Before, you’d create something and the world would forget it. Now, you create and blockchain remembers it—forever. 🎯 Mission […]
The world keeps spinning because thousands of techies—programmers, engineers, inventors—are grinding behind the scenes. They’re the unsung heroes creating the languages, chips, apps, and even the algorithms that fill up our timelines.
Charlie Brown, Snoopy, and the gang weren’t just cute — they totally changed how we see comics. Before that, comic strips were just seen as a pastime. But with Peanuts, they became cultural, educational, and philosophical vibes.
From a static page to a creative stage: the impact of HotJava in ’94.