TheBox2050 NBPAP & Pro Polymath Podcast with built in Metaverse
Pro Polymath insight and life lessons through storytelling and innovation sparks. If you want to submit an article on this podcast submissions can be forwarded through fanmail, by submitting you give me permission to publish your work and you must be the creator of the material to be eligible to appear on this site you will also need to supply a picture and a description of your submission for publication if it’s explicit please say so so I can label it appropriately a positive community voice is what I am trying to achieve and it takes a community to create one. I can only accept MP3 or Text I will convert to AI narration in a text submission you can recommend a gender and accent for the Narrator. There’s also a metaverse in this site to explore a deserted island where you can meet people in a virtual world we have lost many battles we only have to win once
TheBox2050 NBPAP & Pro Polymath Podcast with built in Metaverse
Exbetaniw
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https://opensea.io/collection/boringpunksnft The Story of Exbetaniw
Teleport to Tasman Island https://www.sandbox.game/en/experiences/Tasman%20Island/e4aeabd3-ee3b-4636-b628-382929a6927b/page/
https://www.hoopladigital.com.au/audiobook/the-future-swarm-peter-liam/19509840Borrow The Future Swarm Free with your library card
Read and Weep https://opensea.io/TheBox2050
Exbetany. In the year 2026, Rob Exbetnew had two great loves, conspiracy podcasts and an NFT collection called You're Not Punk, a series of badly drawn cyberpunks with slogans like Be Authentic and Apologize in 4K. Rob owned 7,342 of them. His friends said that made him a collector. The government said that made him tax relevant. By day, he lived off instant noodles and irony. By night, he worked on a design he called the Infinite Distance Laser. He claimed it could send light across any distance instantly, then bounce back an image of whatever it saw, basically a cosmic selfie from outside the Milky Way. The Internet, naturally, mocked him. A talk show host called it a flashlight for people who think Wi-Fi comes from aliens. But one day, Rob accidentally posted his design notes to the blockchain instead of cat memes. The NFTs exploded in value overnight. Unot punk holders claimed his schematics were the first true on-chain breakthrough in intergalactic optics. Within weeks, venture funds that normally sold centered dog collars for billionaires were wiring millions into Rob's wallet. And then, most inconveniently, the laser actually worked. It fired a silent beam through space, punched beyond the Milky Way, and beamed back a perfect 3D map of the entire galaxy, complete with timestamps and inexplicable flashes where time looked like it was redacting itself, scientists panicked. Philosophers fainted. TikTok recreated it as a filter. The media that mocked him now called him the man who photographed time itself. His NFTs skyrocketed it again. Tech influencers began wearing holographic versions of them on their jackets. Rob, bewildered, tried to explain that he'd only wanted to prove art could make science ridiculous, but by then, time literally looped on itself. His interviews started airing before they were filmed. The last known livestream showed Rob smiling as the Milky Way folded into a cosmic spiral, saying, Just wait till you see my next drop. Nobody knows if he was joking or omnipresent. Either way, every time someone mints a you're not punk, a faint pulse flickers in deep space, like the universe itself is still laughing.
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