The certification path the article describes is solid but incomplete. Do not sleep on vendor-specific training from companies like Vertiv and Schneider Electric. Those credentials carry serious weight with hiring managers at major facilities.
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The certification path the article describes is solid but incomplete. Do not sleep on vendor-specific training from companies like Vertiv and Schneider Electric. Those credentials carry serious weight with hiring managers at major facilities.
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.
Hot take but Second Life Ranker gets way more credit than it deserves. The pocket watch mechanic is a smart narrative device but the story eventually turns into a pure power escalation fest that forgets its own emotional core.
From a craft perspective the choice to make the catalyst for the tragedy a piece of writing rather than a violent act or political betrayal is genuinely unusual for this genre. Text is doing narrative work that swords usually do in isekai. That is worth appreciating.
The Saitama comparison is interesting but Yu is darker because One Punch Man eventually finds humor in the premise. The Boxer finds tragedy. There is no relief valve.
Mild criticism, the pacing around chapters 15 through 25 in the manhwa is noticeably uneven. The story clearly knows where it's going but takes some awkward detours getting there.
The regression subgenre has exploded in popularity over the past few years, becoming one of the most beloved narrative frameworks in Korean manhwa. The core premise is deceptively simple: a protagonist dies or fails catastrophically, then returns to an earlier point in time with their memories intact. Armed with future knowledge, they get a second chance to change their fate, save loved ones, gain power, or pursue revenge against those who wronged them. What makes regression stories so compelling is the combination of dramatic irony, strategic satisfaction, and emotional depth they provide. Readers know what the protagonist knows, creating tension when other characters make mistakes we can see coming. We feel smart alongside protagonists who use foreknowledge to outmaneuver enemies. And we experience the emotional weight of carrying memories of futures that haven't happened yet, of people who died who are currently alive, of betrayals that haven't occurred.
YA rating threw me off too. The emotional content is definitely heavier than most YA I have read. Maybe the absence of graphic violence or explicit content keeps it in that category technically.
Three months in on the free tier and only hit the 25 credit limit twice. Using it mostly for autocomplete and small refactors. For light usage the free plan is genuinely viable.
The AI video generation race just got a clear winner. Runway Gen-4.5 topped the Video Arena leaderboard with a 1,247 Elo score, surpassing both Google Veo 3 and OpenAI Sora 2. For those unfamiliar with Elo ratings, this is the same system used to rank chess players and competitive games. A higher score means more wins in head-to-head comparisons. When real users compare videos side by side without knowing which AI generated them, they consistently choose Runway's output. Runway didn't start as an enterprise video tool. It began as a playground for artists and filmmakers who wanted to experiment with AI-generated visuals. The early versions produced fascinating but inconsistent results. Sometimes you'd get stunning cinematic footage. Other times you'd get distorted motion and unrealistic physics. Gen-4.5 changed that equation by achieving breakthrough consistency in motion quality and physical accuracy.
The Figma import feature is criminally underrated. Bring in your design frames directly and Bolt converts them into working code. That alone collapses the handoff process between design and engineering by days.
The debugging experience when things go wrong is where this tool still feels rough. The AI autofix feature catches common errors, but when something breaks in a subtle way, the back-and-forth to diagnose it can consume more tokens than building the feature did.
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.
OpenAI's latest subscription offering represents its most aggressive move yet to reclaim market share in the rapidly expanding AI-powered coding assistant sector
The gray clutch was such a smart choice. It's unexpected but works so beautifully with the pink.
Just got back from a date wearing almost this exact outfit. The confidence boost is real! Though I switched to flats after dinner.
I actually prefer this with the metallic sandals instead of leather they add an unexpected twist
I've been looking for distressed jeans exactly like these! Anyone know where to find similar ones at a lower price point?