That gap is maddening given how much hormonal variation affects hunger patterns in women across a month, not just across a day.
Sign up to see more
SignupAlready a member?
LoginBy continuing, you agree to Sociomix's Terms of Service, Privacy Policy
Sign up to see more
SignupAlready a member?
LoginBy continuing, you agree to Sociomix's Terms of Service, Privacy Policy

That gap is maddening given how much hormonal variation affects hunger patterns in women across a month, not just across a day.
Night eating syndrome and circadian eating misalignment feels like a connection this article only brushes. For people with clinical patterns of night eating the timing piece is genuinely therapeutic, not just optimization.
The creators behind some of Webtoon's most successful psychological thrillers have returned with a series that's already generating intense discussion across manhwa communities. For fans who've been following the horror and thriller genre on digital platforms, Carnby Kim and Youngchan Hwang need no introduction. Their latest collaboration tackles themes of artistic plagiarism, obsession, and murder in ways that feel disturbingly relevant to current conversations about creative theft and AI-generated content. This guide covers everything you need to know about Copycat, from its premise and release schedule to how it compares with their previous masterpieces like Sweet Home and Bastard.
If the concert sequences are your main reason for going, opening weekend in a good theater is probably worth it. If you are mainly interested in the biographical story, the streaming version will serve you just as well and the reviews suggest the narrative is thin enough that you will not feel like you missed a cinematic event by waiting.
Adaptation news has apparently been circulating for a while but nothing official. The challenge would be finding a studio that could do justice to the nano machine interface sequences, because cheap production would absolutely ruin what makes those moments work.
Reading this made me want to go start from the very first chapter again. The setup is so deceptively simple and then slowly reveals itself to be something much bigger and stranger.
The BL (Boys' Love) genre has exploded in popularity over recent years, and isekai stories have dominated manhwa and manga for nearly a decade. Combining these elements seems like an obvious move, yet surprisingly few series have attempted it seriously. Shall I Write You A Love Letter, created by Nickup and Yutae and released on Lehzin in December 2025, takes the familiar otome isekai formula and transforms it into a compelling BL narrative that subverts expectations at every turn. Otome isekai typically features female protagonists transported into romance game worlds where they must navigate relationships with attractive male love interests. The formula has been refined through countless iterations to the point where readers can predict story beats from the first chapter. What makes Shall I Write You A Love Letter noteworthy is how it takes that established framework and examines it through a completely different lens, creating something that feels both familiar and refreshingly new.
Does anyone else think the King of Hell arc genuinely elevates this beyond a pure comedy? The stakes feel real in a way that sneaks up on you.
The year 2026 marks a pivotal moment in the evolution of manhwa as a medium. What started as a trickle of Korean comics receiving anime adaptations has become a flood, with at least fifteen confirmed projects bringing beloved manhwa to animated life. This explosive growth wasn't accidental but the inevitable result of Solo Leveling's massive success proving that manhwa adaptations can compete with traditional manga anime in quality, popularity, and profitability. Studios across Japan and Korea are investing heavily in manhwa properties, recognizing that Korean storytelling brings fresh perspectives, innovative premises, and built-in fanbases eager to see their favorite series animated. The diversity of genres receiving adaptations demonstrates that manhwa appeal extends far beyond action and fantasy into romance, psychological thriller, sports, and slice-of-life territories.
Cautiously optimistic overall. The pricing drama of the last few months has been a bit of a mess but the underlying tool capability is legitimately good and keeps getting better.
The article says romance is minimal and that's mostly true but there are definitely some relationship dynamics building that feel more intentional than anything in the original.
Developers have a new anxiety in 2026: token anxiety. You're in the middle of debugging a complex problem, the AI is helping you refactor three files simultaneously, and suddenly you wonder if this session is about to cost you $50. That mental tax slows you down and makes you second-guess using the tool you're paying for. Windsurf eliminated that anxiety with a simple decision: flat monthly pricing with no token limits. Fifteen dollars per month. Unlimited usage. No tracking credits or calculating costs per query. That pricing model sounds almost boring compared to the complex token systems other AI coding tools use, but boring is exactly what professional developers want when it comes to pricing. They want predictable costs and unlimited usage so they can focus on writing code instead of budgeting AI queries.
As a solo founder running a SaaS product, the ability to parallelize development is genuinely transformative. Three weeks ago I ran four different agent sessions simultaneously exploring different approaches to the same problem. Would have taken me months the old way.
When a company raises $200 million in Series E funding during January 2026, investors are betting on more than potential. They're backing proven market demand and sustainable growth. Synthesia's funding round came alongside a 44% year-over-year increase in headcount to 706 employees, signaling aggressive expansion in a category the company essentially created: AI avatar-based video generation for enterprise training and communications. Corporate training videos have been expensive and slow to produce for decades. Recording a single 10-minute training module traditionally required booking a studio, hiring a presenter, scheduling a videographer, managing multiple takes, and editing everything together. If you needed to update information or translate content, you essentially started over. Synthesia eliminated this entire production workflow by replacing human presenters with AI avatars.
Does anyone else find it interesting that all the AI safety-focused messaging from Anthropic coexists with these massive infrastructure plays? Building your own chips is about competitive dominance, not safety. These are two very different instincts.
The problem with Anthropic's success is that it is going to attract every big tech company into this market hard. Google, Microsoft, and Amazon all have the infrastructure and talent to ship competitive products. The next eighteen months are going to be chaos.
Honestly the 15 minute window is fine for fixing typos but it feels a little arbitrary. Why not 30? Why not an hour? Did someone at Meta just spin a wheel?
What would actually move the needle against Nvidia is not any single company building custom chips but an open alternative to CUDA that the whole industry gets behind. There are efforts in that direction but none have really gained critical mass yet.
Meta has just had one of its most important AI moments yet and the early signals are hard to ignore. Following the launch of its newest AI model Muse Spark, the company’s standalone Meta AI app surged dramatically in popularity, hinting at a much larger shift that is beginning to take shape. The release is particularly significant because it marks the first major AI model rollout under Alexandr Wang, who joined Meta to reboot its AI strategy. This is not just another incremental update. It represents a more aggressive and focused push into the AI race. According to data from Appfigures, Meta AI jumped from number 57 to number 5 on the U.S. App Store within a day of the launch. That kind of movement rarely happens without a strong underlying pull from users. It signals not curiosity but intent.
Join independent creators, thought leaders, and storytellers to share your unique perspectives, and spark meaningful conversations.