>
We Are the Villains in This Story
My Prediction For the War with Iran
Foreign Hacker Cracked Into FBI's Epstein Files In 2023, Was 'Disgusted' At Child Sexual
Musk Whips Out 'Macrohard' In Disruptive Tesla-xAI Bid To Shaft Software Companies
Human Brain Cells Merge With Silica To Play DOOM
Will Yann LeCun Provide The Next Breakthrough In AI?
Human Brain Cells Merge With Silica To Play DOOM
Solar And Storage Could Reshape Rural Electricity Markets
With World Seemingly At War, DARPA Finds Time To Unveil The X-76
The world's first diesel plug-in hybrid pickup truck is here
US advances nuclear revival with approval of Natrium Gen IV reactor
Your Contractor Doesn't Want Me To Show You This!
CEO of Blacklisted AI Company Anthropic, Dario Amodei Says His AI Models 'May Have Gained...

The transparent inflatable shelters look comfortable and include a bathroom and air-conditioning.
The shelters are named Jungle Bubbles and were designed by Eye in the Sky. They're made from polyester fabric and have a total floorspace of 22 sq m (236 sq ft) inside.
Situated atop a raised platform and entered via a tunnel-like entrance, each Jungle Bubbles' transparent section hosts a combined bedroom and living area with a king-sized bed and some seating. There are no curtains, but the bathrooms are located within an adjoining non-transparent section, so you don't need to be an exhibitionist to stay in one of these.
The Jungle Bubbles are located in Anantara Golden Triangle Elephant Camp & Resort's 160 acre (65 hectare) hilltop site, which overlooks the Mekong and Ruak rivers in northern Thailand. The elephants live in a camp that's connected to the resort.
"Anantara Golden Triangle Elephant Camp & Resort is world famous for its elephant camp that, along with the Golden Triangle Asian Elephant Foundation (GTAEF), were set up primarily to help elephants that cannot help themselves: for those that find themselves, through abuse or through circumstance, unable to provide and maintain an income for themselves, for their mahouts [owners] and their families," says the company. "To date over 60 elephants have been rescued from Thailand's city streets, of which 22 now live in the jungle environment of Anantara's Elephant Camp, along with their entire mahout families of 50 people, who receive English lessons, education for their children, and 100 percent of the profits from the sale of garments from a traditional silk worm business."