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.
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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 technology sector is experiencing a paradox. While headlines scream about mass layoffs at major tech companies, a critical shortage is quietly building in one of the most essential areas of digital infrastructure. Datacenters, the physical backbone of our digital world, are facing an unprecedented demand surge, and there simply are not enough skilled professionals to build and maintain them. Countries across the globe are rushing to establish their own datacenter infrastructure. From India's ambitious plans to become a datacenter hub to the European Union's push for data sovereignty, and emerging markets in Southeast Asia and Latin America building their first large scale facilities, the construction boom is just beginning.
The Dokja and Joonghyuk dynamic is what got me completely hooked. The idea of someone knowing everything about a person before even meeting them, and then that person slowly realizing it, is such good dramatic tension.
24 episodes for a first season would be incredible IF that number were confirmed anywhere. For now we are working with zero official details beyond the basic announcement.
The series also quietly does something fascinating with Coach K by showing how a person can simultaneously care about someone and still be using them. Those two things coexisting without resolution is more honest than most fiction allows.
Suho is not Jinwoo and that's okay. The whole point is that he shouldn't be. Fans who wanted Jinwoo two point zero were always going to be disappointed, but fans who wanted a new story in a world they love are being served well.
If Aniplex really delivers on this the way they delivered on Solo Leveling, the conversation about Korean webtoons in animation is going to shift permanently. This is that important a title.
In a medium filled with talented artists producing stunning work, making a claim about any series having the "best" art feels bold. Yet Nano Machine consistently delivers combat sequences so fluid, detailed, and visually innovative that even readers who don't typically care about martial arts stories find themselves captivated by the sheer spectacle on display. The series combines traditional murim aesthetics with futuristic sci-fi elements, creating a unique visual identity that stands apart from typical cultivation manhwa. The nano machine implanted in protagonist Cheon Yeo-Woon's body doesn't just give him power. It becomes a storytelling device that allows the artist to visualize techniques, energy flows, and combat analysis in ways other series can't replicate.
The comparison to Hajime no Ippo is interesting but they are almost opposite stories. Ippo is about climbing toward the top through effort and heart. The Boxer is about what happens at the very top when effort is irrelevant.
The article completely skips the copyright situation. There are dozens of active lawsuits against AI video companies right now and that legal cloud hangs over every production decision for anyone using these tools commercially.
Started manhwa because the Solo Leveling anime made me impatient waiting for season 3 and now I have twelve series on my reading list. This genre is a trap in the best possible way.
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.
The transparency argument is actually TikTok's strongest point here. They are not claiming to offer encryption they do not have. Some platforms have been much less honest about what access they retain.
It would likely go through federal court challenging the administrative process, possibly arguing the designation criteria were misapplied. Cases like this tend to move slowly and the interim restrictions can last years.
Institutional money is patient. They were buying the dip during two consecutive days of outflows and now the market is validating that positioning. That is a completely different dynamic from 2021 retail mania.
The article frames this as TikTok breaking from industry norms, but given that Meta just reversed Instagram E2EE around the same time, maybe the industry norm is shifting back toward access. The era of unconditional privacy promises on social media might genuinely be ending.
I set up both tools for our team and watched half of them migrate back to Claude Code within two weeks. The workflow transparency just clicked for them in a way that Codex did not.
Anthropic being valued at $380 billion after basically zero revenue three years ago is either the most justified valuation in tech history or the most expensive bet on a single category ever. Possibly both.
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