The reshoots adding a new ending for around $50 million is a jaw-dropping number for post-production work. Something significant clearly had to change in the third act.
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The reshoots adding a new ending for around $50 million is a jaw-dropping number for post-production work. Something significant clearly had to change in the third act.
First time I really paid attention to Jaafar was when the casting was announced in January 2023. I remember thinking it was either going to be revelatory or a disaster and there was no middle ground possible. Turns out it was revelatory, which honestly surprised me.
That is a completely valid argument in the abstract but try telling it to a lifelong fan sitting in a packed theater when Billie Jean starts.
Dungeon Reset as a beginner recommendation is a bold choice and honestly the right one for a certain type of reader. If you're more Minecraft than Dark Souls, Dawoon's story is absolutely for you.
The nano machine is genuinely the best power system in manhwa for justifying why the protagonist keeps getting stronger without it feeling arbitrary.
The Gen-4 Turbo option for rapid iteration is underrated in this writeup. When you are testing a dozen different concept directions, speed matters more than peak quality. Turbo lets you find the right direction before committing to a full render.
The ROI measurement problem the article mentions at the end is genuinely the Achilles heel of enterprise training investment broadly, not just for AI video. Proving learning transfer is hard. Most L&D teams live and die by completion rate data instead.
As someone who has been reading BL manhwa for over a decade, the isekai crossover has been surprisingly underexplored. Most attempts feel like they bolt the isekai premise onto a regular BL story without thinking about what the combination actually changes thematically. This one seems to get it.
Real talk: the token consumption during complex builds is brutal. Had a project burn through a month's worth of tokens in three days because the AI kept regenerating components instead of making targeted edits.
The designer-developer relationship has been tense for decades. Designers create pixel-perfect mockups in Figma. Developers translate them to code and somehow everything looks slightly wrong. Fonts don't match. Spacing is inconsistent. Buttons have different corner radiuses. Both sides get frustrated, blame each other, and the product suffers. V0 by Vercel is fixing this problem by generating production-quality React components that look exactly like the designs. The rebrand from v0.dev to v0.app in January 2026 signaled expanded ambitions beyond just UI component generation. Vercel positioned the tool for full-stack web development, though its core strength remains frontend excellence. That strategic clarity matters because trying to be everything often means excelling at nothing. V0 chose to dominate the handoff between design and code before expanding into other areas.
The software development world just witnessed something unprecedented. A European startup called Lovable reached $20 million in annual recurring revenue in just two months, making it potentially the fastest-growing startup in European history. But here's the twist that's making traditional software agencies nervous: they did it by giving non-technical founders the power to build full-stack applications without writing a single line of code. For years, the promise of no-code tools has been the same: anyone can build an app. But the reality has always been different. You'd create a beautiful frontend, get excited about your progress, and then hit the technical cliff. Suddenly you needed to configure databases, set up authentication, manage API keys, and deploy to servers. The "no-code" dream became a "hire-a-developer-anyway" nightmare.
Not gonna lie, the article is well-written but feels like it was constructed to be bullish with a small bow of risk warnings tied at the end. Real risk here deserves more than the last two paragraphs.
Instagram has rolled out a small but long overdue feature that users have been asking for years. You can now edit your comments after posting them. This simple change solves a very real frustration. Until now, fixing even the smallest typo meant deleting your comment and writing it all over again. That friction is finally gone. But there is a boundary. You get a 15 minute window after posting to make edits. Within that time, you can update your comment as many times as you want. There is also a layer of transparency built in. Once a comment is edited, others will be able to see that it has been modified. However, unlike platforms such as iMessage, Instagram does not show the edit history. What was originally written stays hidden.
I can't decide which death was more traumatic. Oberyn's was shocking, but Joel's felt like losing a friend.
I wonder if the dress comes in other colors? Would love to see this in a deep emerald
Does anyone else collect vintage style pieces? I'd love to hear about your favorite finds
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