“10 Links in 10 Minutes” is a concise, weekly newsletter designed to give busy professionals and curious readers a rapid yet substantive window into the topics that Arturo Pelayo follows most closely. Each issue arrives as a carefully curated list of ten hyperlinks—drawn from reputable sources across the globe—accompanied by brief but insightful annotations that explain why each link matters. Structured so that a reader can work through the entire list in roughly ten minutes, the newsletter cuts through information overload by focusing on cross-disciplinary developments: emerging technologies, climate and sustainability initiatives, design thinking advances, shifts in global trade, and cultural or policy debates that intersect with these themes.

Rather than simply aggregating headlines, the newsletter’s annotations provide context about who is behind a given report or article, what methodologies or data underpin it, and where it sits in the broader landscape of innovation or policy. For instance, a link about breakthroughs in carbon capture might be accompanied by a note about the research institution responsible, its funding sources, and early pilot results—allowing readers to grasp both the technical significance and the real-world implications in just a sentence or two. Similarly, when an item addresses a new service-design framework emerging from Europe or a community-driven urban planning pilot in the Asia-Pacific region, readers receive a snapshot of the local setting, the stakeholders involved, and why that development could signal a broader shift.

The newsletter does not confine itself to one sector or geography. Over time, subscribers will see stories ranging from precision fermentation startups in Latin America to biophilic healthcare design principles drawn from indigenous wisdom in Oceania. In selecting links, Arturo leans on his network of collaborators—academics, designers, technologists, and policy analysts—so that each week’s lineup reflects both headline-making announcements and under-the-radar projects with potential to reshape industries. By weaving together these disparate threads, “10 Links in 10 Minutes” encourages readers to notice the connections between, say, a new mini-factory prototype in timber construction and shifts in supply-chain resilience prompted by geopolitical realignments.

Because the average reader often lacks time for in-depth scanning of specialist journals or policy briefs, the newsletter emphasizes clarity and precision. Each annotation avoids jargon when possible, instead offering just enough technical or contextual detail to help a reader decide whether to click through for deeper exploration. Over time, subscribers develop a mental map of where key conversations are happening: which regions are leading on microgrid deployment, which research labs are pioneering regenerative design methods, or which regulatory bodies are updating standards for energy storage. The result is a standing weekly appointment for professionals—consultants, researchers, investors, or civic leaders—who need to stay abreast of rapid changes without sacrificing large blocks of time.

Although “10 Links in 10 Minutes” is free to read, it also serves as an entrée to Arturo’s broader work: custom consulting, white-paper development, and workshop facilitation. Subscribers often find that a link in the newsletter sparks a conversation about a collaboration opportunity—whether it involves instructional-design projects for corporate learning, strategic planning for nearshoring initiatives, or cultural-heritage programs grounded in decolonial frameworks. In that sense, the newsletter functions as both a standalone resource and a dynamic showcase of Arturo’s interdisciplinary interests and global perspective.

In summary, “10 Links in 10 Minutes” is more than just a list of headlines. It is a weekly briefing that distills complex, global developments across technology, climate, design, and policy into a ten-minute read—helping busy readers build their knowledge, spot emerging trends, and connect the dots between seemingly unrelated innovations. By maintaining a balance between breadth and depth, the newsletter ensures that its audience remains informed about the ideas and initiatives most likely to shape the coming months and years.