The point about carbohydrate-heavy meals feeling energizing at lunch but causing bloating at 9 pm resonates completely. I thought I had a carb intolerance for years. Turns out I had a timing issue.
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

The point about carbohydrate-heavy meals feeling energizing at lunch but causing bloating at 9 pm resonates completely. I thought I had a carb intolerance for years. Turns out I had a timing issue.
The fact that Arzen in front of Seongshik does not match the cruel lead he remembers from the novel is the setup I am most invested in. Either the novel was wrong, or this world has already diverged, or Arzen is hiding something. All three options are compelling.
ORV anime being handled by Aniplex means the production quality ceiling is already set very high. Whether it actually reaches that ceiling is another question entirely but the potential is genuinely exciting.
Hot take but The Warrior Returns' modern Earth setting is actually underused as a concept. The tension between someone with medieval combat instincts and modern civilization never fully becomes the series' main focus when it could have been extraordinary.
If your meeting culture is so broken that you need an AI to justify skipping meetings, the AI is not the fix. The meeting culture is the problem.
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.
does anyone else reread specific arcs just to see if you missed anything or is that just a me thing
Three years ago I paid a developer $12,000 for an MVP that took four months and still was not quite right. Last week I built something comparable in two days. The anger I feel about that $12,000 is profound.
Manhwa readers are living in genuinely historic times right now. Warner Bros partnering with Webtoon for animated adaptations on top of everything else happening with Korean comics in global media is unprecedented.
The 4 million users who used v0 before the February 2026 rebrand came largely from developers who discovered it organically. The new push toward designers, PMs, and non-technical users is a genuinely different product motion.
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.
Respectfully disagree. Facebook gives you unlimited time to edit and the world has not collapsed. Instagram is being overcautious.
The framing around personal superintelligence is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Every AI company is calling their chatbot a superintelligence product right now. The word is losing all meaning.
Genuinely, how many of the 3 million weekly Codex users are actually using it as their primary coding tool versus experimenting with it occasionally? Those numbers are very different things.
Works on Reels, Stories comments, and regular posts. Basically anywhere you can currently leave a comment the edit option should appear now within the 15 minute window.
Anyone else notice that Microsoft uses Claude Code internally even though they sell GitHub Copilot? That detail should be a lot bigger news than it is.
Could we talk about how versatile this robe is? From morning coffee to zoom meetings with a tank underneath
Join independent creators, thought leaders, and storytellers to share your unique perspectives, and spark meaningful conversations.