The film getting a projected $150 million worldwide opening weekend kind of proves the article's point that the audience for this is enormous regardless of what critics think. Fan enthusiasm for Michael Jackson does not expire.
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The film getting a projected $150 million worldwide opening weekend kind of proves the article's point that the audience for this is enormous regardless of what critics think. Fan enthusiasm for Michael Jackson does not expire.
Entry-level datacenter technician roles in most US markets are landing between 55k and 75k right now, with senior ops roles clearing 110k to 130k fairly routinely. And those numbers are trending upward because of the shortage.
Tomb Raider King's artifact lore being described as dense is an understatement. The relic system in that manhwa is as intricate as a JRPG's lore bible. Studio EEK has a serious challenge ahead with pacing.
The nano machine is genuinely the best power system in manhwa for justifying why the protagonist keeps getting stronger without it feeling arbitrary.
This is the best argument for AI editing tools that nobody talks about. The confidence that errors are recoverable changes how you show up in front of the camera or microphone in the first place.
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.
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.
The extended thinking feature is the one I keep coming back to. Pure pattern matching from training data produces plausible-looking garbage at scale. Actual architectural reasoning before writing anything is what separates a prototype from something you can build a business on.
Luma Ray 3 is interesting but for commercial work the licensing terms and enterprise support are still way behind Runway. Interesting tech, not ready for client-facing production in my experience.
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.
Gonna be honest, the article lost me at AI super app era. That phrase has been used to describe WeChat, TikTok, ChatGPT, Gemini, and now Meta AI in the span of about three years. At some point the terminology needs to actually mean something.
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.
Genuinely curious, does Anthropic actually need to fully own chip design to get the benefits, or could they do what Amazon did with the original Trainium and work closely with a chip design firm to build something that is essentially custom but with external expertise?
OpenAI's latest subscription offering represents its most aggressive move yet to reclaim market share in the rapidly expanding AI-powered coding assistant sector
I always struggle with graphic tees looking too juvenile but this one hits just right
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