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Kai Ochsen

Kai Ochsen (128)

This site is a bit of a mix, you’ll find opinions, personal projects, and things I’m working on (or I'm thinking to carry out). Whether it’s a crazy idea, a logo design I actually like, or a melody that got stuck in my head, it all ends up here. 

Yes, I’m an introverted tech nerd with a soft spot for programming, robotics, 3D printing, messy sketches, and loud music. I spend most of my time exploring the weird overlap between coding, design, and creativity, building stuff, breaking stuff, and occasionally making it all work again. I’m especially into understand machines and people, but I’ve also got a thing for drawing, composing moody tracks, and killing some demons in DOOM way more than I probably should.

This site is a bit of a mix, you’ll find opinions, personal projects, and things I’m working on (or I'm thinking to carry out). Whether it’s a crazy idea, a logo design I actually like, or a melody that got stuck in my head, it all ends up here.

The comfort cult of 90s TV

For nearly three decades, popular culture has treated Friends and Sex and the City as sacred relics of television history. They are streamed, quoted, revived, and endlessly referenced as if their perfection were self-evident. To question them feels almost heretical…

Terraforming Earth before Mars

Few ideas have captured the human imagination as powerfully as colonizing Mars. Red deserts, frozen peaks, and alien horizons have become symbols of a future where humanity transcends its home world. From pulp fiction to billion-dollar space programs, Mars has…

Quantum communication and the end of secrecy

For as long as humans have lived in organized societies, secrecy has been power. Empires rose and fell on hidden knowledge, generals depended on codes to outmaneuver their enemies, and merchants guarded trade routes as jealously as kings guarded thrones.

The new water wars of the 21st century

For much of the twentieth century, the world’s great conflicts were framed in the language of oil. Nations rose and fell on access to petroleum, wars were launched over pipelines and reserves, and entire economies were structured around black gold.