By eleazarvo on Skatehive
https://images.ecency.com/DQmcAWf4ki9FUpcbakopr4e3R4xbD7XGz7c1Bgj3MsaU3wy/cyangradienttechnologystartupbusinesscompanypresentation.jpg Few words carry the weight of "Armageddon." For centuries, that name has reminded us that, according to certain prophecies, the world will one day end in fire and destruction. But when Michael Bay released his film in 1998, he took that age-old idea and transformed it into something completely different, creating a thrilling ride with Bruce Willis, plenty of explosions, and a soundtrack that still has us singing along.Watching "Armageddon" today, almost twenty-five years later, is like opening a time capsule. The film evokes the late nineties, that moment when the world looked toward the new millennium with a mixture of fear and hope. We were terrified of the Y2K bug, news reports spoke of killer asteroids, and then, suddenly, this story arrived about a group of oil drillers turned astronauts to save humanity. It was absurd, yes, but it was also exactly