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Opus Tsunami Kindle Edition

Explore the terrifying power of tsunamis! -- Drescher takes us on a fascinating tour of the most destructive force in nature: tsunamis. Explore the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, look at the science behind these powerful waves, and then put yourself into the middle of the 2011 Japanese tsunami. Finally, Drescher takes us on a tour of the Pacific Northwest, where the Cascadia subduction zone is just waiting to unleash the next big one! "F or those who enjoy good literature I recommend." -  Kaize George Amazon Kindle 5 stars Buy it here

Journalist and writer

  Nathan A. Drescher is a globe-trotting journalist and speculative fiction writer from Canada.  You can find Nathan's work in Android Police, Digital Trends, Ottawa Life Magazine, the Algonquin Times, Marketing Edge Magazine, and other publications. Nathan has lived in multiple countries as an English teacher. This includes South Korea and Russia. He also spent a year living aboard fishing boats at sea. He didn't like that, so he came back to land and settled down. Nathan loves to write about time, whether it's what our future world will resemble or how it used to look in the past. He mixes his stories with daring adventure and suspense. Also, food. Lots and lots of food.

7 Robots You Need in Your Life Right Now!

Let's be honest. The Jetsons and Star Wars make robots a ridiculous concept. Those are characters created for pure entertainment purposes. The reality, however, is much different. The future of robots is more akin to 'Blade Runner' or 'Better Than Us.' Robot technology is advancing exponentially. But we don't have to wait that long to get there. Robots are already a reality, and you can implement them in your life today. Here are five robots you need in your life right now. Robot companions It's no secret that people today love company. Friends can help keep us grounded and provide unconditional love. However, having a friend in the age of COVID and busy lives can be downright impossible. That's why it's so important to have robots as friends. It's the perfect solution to our busy, siloed lives. In addition, some robots can be programmed to do a host of tasks, including: Feed your pet Take care of your home by cleaning up messes, cooking food, wa

What Is Futurism? The Definitive Guide

Films love predicting the future. Books have been imagining the future for a hundred years. H. G. Wells and Aldous Huxley tried to envision the real world of tomorrow. So did James Cameron. Are these highly creative minds considered futurists? If not, then what is a futurist?   The answer, like most of futurism, is complex.  Let's dive right in. What Is Futurism? According to the dictionary, futurism has a couple of meanings. a) An adherence to the future; b) The study of the future and predictions about the future Both definitions are a little vague but that's the dictionary for you. They're also not entirely correct.  You see, futurism is more than movies and sci-fi books. It affects every major discipline, particularly in the sciences, but also in economics, politics, design, and even law.  Futurism is indeed the study of the future, but real futurists avoid making predictions. They look for trends and attempt to follow those trends through to their logical development. 

Is Ottawa's Transit System Ready For The Future? No, and Here's Why.

During a summer of intense global heatwaves, this particular day stood out.  It was hot. Really hot. Here in Ottawa, Canada's capital city of 1.1 million people, the thermometer surpassed 41 degrees centigrade with the humidex. That's hot. So it was on this scorching August day that I thought I would take my three-year-old daughter on a transit trip to the Rideau Centre. It's a large mall in the downtown core. After all, the buses, subway, and mall were all nicely air-conditioned. OC Transpo, Ottawa's transit authority, had different ideas. I quickly realized that Canada has a serious transit crisis. Because it's summer, my kids are out of school. We took my daughter out of daycare because face it, that's too expensive (a completely different issue I'll tackle another time). Thankfully we put our son in a day camp for two weeks. My wife was working full-time for the feds. It was just my daughter and I. Daddy and daughter time!  We spent the week hanging out.

Are Cities Ready For The Future Of Work?

 The COVID pandemic revealed that many workers can work from anywhere. Are cities ready to attract them? The future of cities and the future of work are intimately connected. They always have been. During the industrial age, rural farmers flocked to the urban centers, and the cities we know today were born. Now those workers, many of whom are so-called 'knowledge workers' are completely mobile, untethered from the offices that kept them in urban cores. Most cities are not ready for this new reality. The Current State of Work The COVID pandemic is winding down in most of the developed world, and economies are returning to normal. Are they really, though? After all, during the pandemic, nearly 80% of companies switched to at-home work. That's millions of experienced and educated people working from home. Furthermore, 47% of company CEOs have said they will make work-from-home permanent. This not only saves the company a lot of money that would otherwise go to real estate, o

Is It Time to Get Rid of Cars?

Is it time to get rid of cars? Think about it for a moment. Driving is a royal pain in the ass. It's ridiculously expensive and car-owners are milked for every last penny from both government and private business. Also, i t's incredibly dangerous; car accidents make up the fourth most common cause of death around the world. And it's frustrating that  the government hands a license to pretty much every who applies and you get some of the biggest douches behind the wheel everywhere you go! And let us not forget that i t's horrible for the environment, with nearly half of all greenhouse gas emissions coming from the ONE BILLION motor vehicles that are on our roads around the world. Cars need to be eliminated from our economic and cultural makeup and replaced with efficient, clean, automated and affordable public transit. A Brief Look At How We Got Here Cars and highways and driver licenses and auto insurance are relatively new to the world. The roads of A