
Every Athlete’s Lifelong Journey.
A multi-sport platform connecting athletes, teams, families, coaches, and support networks from first play to lifelong participation.
Each project is an independent, end-to-end product. We build from the root outwards, with vision, guiding today towards tomorrow.

A multi-sport platform connecting athletes, teams, families, coaches, and support networks from first play to lifelong participation.
Lag0s turns AI agents into accountable teams that own capabilities, coordinate work, and continuously improve business execution.
Building informed societies that power tomorrow's communities.
Empower dialog and interest by surfacing alignment between companies and investors.
Relentlessly dig for the root pain. Build from the root outwards.
Play the long game. Use short-term opportunities for validation.
Build real value, backed by coherent revenue opportunities.
Solve for privacy, transparency, value creation, and accountability.
The top three briefs from V³ News, surfaced live and updated hourly. Each one a real event we believe shapes tomorrow.
Russian strikes caused fresh localized energy disruptions in Kharkiv, Chernihiv, and Kyiv Oblast, including a major outage affecting more than 61,000 customers in Chernihiv, while Naftogaz completed urgent gas-network repairs in Vyshneve. At the national level, Ukrenergo reported no planned consumer restrictions for 12 July, indicating that recent damage has so far remained manageable for the wider power system despite continued pressure on local distribution networks.
While there is no fresh 24-48 hour Beijing announcement expanding AI rules into new trade-facing sectors, the snippet adds a tangible trade-supply update by linking recent Reuters reporting on possible tighter overseas access controls for advanced Chinese AI models with a July 10 temporary helium export ban. Together, these reinforce a more concrete pattern of MOFCOM-linked domestic AI demand support alongside potentially tighter control over strategic AI capabilities and inputs.
Shipping through the Strait of Hormuz reportedly fell to multi-week lows over the last 24-48 hours, with ship-tracking data indicating sharply reduced tanker movements amid renewed US-Iran strikes and fresh attacks on vessels. Arabic-language coverage also reflects a worsening operating picture, suggesting that even without universally accepted legal closure language, practical throughput for Gulf energy exports has tightened.