Author: Melissa Hogan

Melissa Hogan is the Senior Editor at Temporaer, and quite possibly the person on the internet who has thought the most about what happens to your data when a hard disk drive fails. She is a self-described storage hardware obsessive — the kind of person who reads NVMe specification documents for fun, tracks NAND flash fab yield rates with genuine emotional investment, and has strong, considered opinions about why QLC cells are misunderstood by mainstream tech media. She came to technology writing the way many of the best specialists do: not through a newsroom, but through an obsession that simply refused to stay quiet.Melissa, a stay-at-home mother, is an example of what the technology industry frequently undervalues: the serious, self-made expert who exists entirely outside of the institutional pipeline. She developed her technological expertise solely through self-directed learning, practical hardware experimentation, and an extraordinary appetite for technical documentation. She doesn't have a degree in journalism or experience in corporate technology, but what she brings to her editorial work at Temporaer is something more uncommon: a sincere, unfulfilled passion for how computers store, retrieve, and safeguard data, along with the patience to fully comprehend it and the ability to articulate it.

A boy was completely stopped by a painting. His mother had hung all of his drawings on the refrigerator with the kind of love that doesn’t require quality. He had been drawing trees, dogs, and anything else his crayon hand could manage for years. One afternoon, he discovered Caravaggio’s “The Calling of Saint Matthew” when he opened a book. The way light penetrates the shadows. Money was strewn, people were frozen at a table, and one man was pointing to himself as if to ask, “Me?” The boy went downstairs that evening, removed all of his drawings, and discarded them.…

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Connor Dougherty and Lily Yarborough met at a firm big enough that two people could work in different parts of the same building for years without really coming into contact until they did. This is how many finance careers come together. Before making a decision that still causes controversy in some Manhattan conference rooms, they both worked at Blackstone’s private credit division, where they gained firsthand knowledge of the workings of institutional lending. They left to pursue careers in cryptocurrency. A few years later, they took an even more bizarre action. To unite those two worlds, they founded a business.The…

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A typical 12-meter shipping container quietly made history on July 30, 2025, while it was parked on the grounds of Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands. It contained iron pellets that reacted with airborne oxygen to turn back into rust and release electricity into the public grid. It was the first time a live electrical network had ever been linked to an iron-air battery. As is often the case, the announcement was modest. The consequences weren’t.Iron-air batteries are intended to address a problem that has plagued the shift to renewable energy for many years. When the sun shines and…

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Many homes currently have a Samsung 850 EVO in a drawer. Perhaps it originated from an upgraded old laptop. Perhaps it was the first SSD that a person had ever purchased, and when Windows finally stopped taking four minutes to boot, it felt almost miraculous in contrast. By 2026 standards, it’s not quick. On a good day, its maximum speed is about 560 MB/s, and any PCIe Gen 4 NVMe drive is so much faster than it is almost unfair to compare. However, discarding it would be a mistake. It might be costly.There is a strong case against purchasing new…

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The first clues surfaced subtly, hidden among translation logs and performance metrics that engineers look through late at night when offices are quiet except for the background hum of server fans. Constructed to enhance the translation process, Google’s Neural Machine Translation system started to yield results that appeared strangely effective. It was more than just improved translation. It was utilizing unprogrammed shortcuts. In order to make Google Translate sound less robotic and more human, GNMT was introduced in 2016. The neural network learned patterns from massive streams of multilingual text rather than translating words by words. The objective was simple:…

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It came first as a faint, compact, oddly mature smudge of deep red light. Such shapes typically indicate something young and far away in the control rooms where astronomers sort through spectra and pixel noise. This one was unruly. In an almost infant universe, the James Webb Space Telescope, which orbited almost a million miles from Earth, seemed to be looking at ancient objects. Only 600 to 800 million years after the Big Bang, when the universe was about 5% of its present age, did the data indicate the existence of galaxies. However, the signature of stars hundreds of millions…

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The peculiarity of “overnight breakthroughs” is how silent they appear at the time. Not a parade. Don’t yell in public. A small group of people realizing the numbers in front of them aren’t a coincidence, someone’s half-drunk coffee cooling next to a keyboard, or the late-night glow from lab monitors… That was the atmosphere surrounding AlphaFold’s performance at CASP14, a biannual competition with the vigor of an academic sports league, except that the stakes are essentially modern biology and the scoreboard is protein structures. The protein folding problem has been a sort of running dare for about half a century.…

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Before the doors open into a cavern that feels more like a cathedral than a laboratory, the elevator descends almost 100 meters below the French-Swiss border. Scaffolds of steel rise into the darkness. In bundled loops, cables are suspended. Protons circle at almost the speed of light somewhere inside this apparatus, colliding with a violence that is invisible to the naked eye. It’s difficult not to get the impression that something significant is always going to happen here as you watch technicians move silently along the platforms. Physicists involved in CERN’s LHCb experiment thought they might have caught a glimpse…

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Something more difficult to identify than the coastal fog that rolls over Highway 101 before dawn, a strange chill swept through Silicon Valley on February 11, 2026. Almost every intelligent person he knows in the tech industry is suffering from severe anxiety, according to a post by veteran entrepreneur Brian Norgard, who has witnessed several tech cycles rise and fall. It resembled a signal flare thrown into a congested digital sky more than a tweet. The mood has subtly changed inside glass-walled offices in Mountain View and Palo Alto. While standing desks and oat-milk lattes are still popular among engineers,…

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In a softly lit lab in Tokyo’s Shinagawa district, a small humanoid robot sat on a metal workbench, its plastic casing faintly warm from internal processors cycling through thousands of linguistic permutations. Engineers leaned over tablets, watching word lists appear in neat rows. The task seemed trivial: produce ten unrelated words. Yet this simple exercise — the Divergent Association Task — has become one of psychology’s most revealing measures of creative thinking. And now, a machine has passed it. The robot, built using generative language systems similar to those powering modern chatbots, did more than complete the test. It scored…

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