That last part is the underrated benefit. The mental overhead of calorie tracking is enormous and most people do not realize how much cognitive space it occupies until it is gone.
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That last part is the underrated benefit. The mental overhead of calorie tracking is enormous and most people do not realize how much cognitive space it occupies until it is gone.
The GLP-1 comparison is genuinely interesting. The cultural infrastructure argument makes a lot of sense. Once a generation normalizes biological optimization in one domain, the adjacent categories expand faster.
Went opening night with a group of friends in their 40s and 50s who grew up with this music. We all agreed it is the most fun we have had at the movies in years despite every flaw the critics describe being accurate. Know your audience.
Having spent a lot of time studying how live performance translates to film, I can say that the Talauega brothers choreographing those sequences with someone who actually understands the movement vocabulary made a genuine difference. Those scenes will hold up.
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.
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.
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.
Been following since near the beginning and watching the global fanbase grow has been genuinely satisfying. This series earned every reader it has.
Sports anime and manga have delivered countless memorable series over the decades, from Slam Dunk's basketball brilliance to Haikyuu's volleyball excellence. These stories typically follow familiar patterns: talented but inexperienced protagonist joins a team, forms bonds with teammates, faces rivals, grows through competition, and ultimately pursues championship glory. The formula works because it taps into universal themes about effort, teamwork, and self-improvement. The Boxer, created by JH, takes everything you expect from sports stories and systematically deconstructs it. The protagonist doesn't love boxing. He doesn't form deep bonds with teammates. He doesn't overcome challenges through friendship and determination. Instead, the manhwa presents one of the darkest, most psychologically complex examinations of combat sports ever created, wrapped in stunningly minimalist artwork that elevates the narrative to something approaching high art.
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.
The OpenAI Startup Fund backed Descript early on, which explains why the AI features feel well integrated rather than bolted on as afterthoughts. The alignment between their AI approach and the underlying product is unusually coherent.
The article mentions 70 percent editing time reduction and I was skeptical until I tracked my own numbers for a month. The actual time savings on a 30-minute interview episode was closer to 65 percent. So yeah, those claims check out.
Vibe coding is the term people are using now and honestly it kind of perfectly describes the experience. You just describe the vibe and something appears.
A 27-year-old bug in OpenBSD found autonomously by an AI. A 17-year-old remote code execution vulnerability in FreeBSD exploited with no human in the loop. If those were offensive capabilities instead of defensive ones we'd be calling this a national security crisis.
Forty million dollars in annual recurring revenue. Six months. One browser-based platform. Those numbers would be impressive for any software company, but for Bolt.new, they represent something more significant: the moment when development environments moved permanently into the cloud and never looked back. Traditional software development has always required setup. Install Node.js, configure your environment, manage dependencies, set up local servers, troubleshoot version conflicts. Before writing a single line of code, developers spend hours or even days preparing their machines. Junior developers often spend their first week just getting their environment working. Bolt.new eliminated all of that with WebContainers technology.
Thirty years of security research missed a bug that an AI found in what, days? The entire premise of legacy security tooling needs to be reconsidered from scratch.
Anthropic on Tuesday unveiled an advanced artificial intelligence model designed specifically to identify software vulnerabilities, marking a significant development in the intersection of AI and cybersecurity. The model, named Claude Mythos Preview, will be available exclusively to a carefully selected group of companies as part of Project Glasswing, a new security initiative that aims to strengthen digital defenses while preventing malicious exploitation. The San Francisco based AI company has chosen to severely restrict access to Claude Mythos Preview due to its powerful capability to detect security weaknesses and software flaws. This decision reflects growing concerns about dual use AI technologies that could be weaponized by adversaries if they fell into the wrong hands.
I'm concerned about comfort with those heels for a whole evening of dancing. Anyone tried those specific ones? I might go with a lower heel version
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