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I am gonna be contrarian here. The bleakness is beautifully executed but I think the story is still in the process of earning all the weight it is asking you to carry. Check back with me at chapter 40.
As someone who has moved cities six times in ten years, the theme of witnessing lives without being able to stay in them hit me in a very personal way I was not expecting from a manhwa.
The article says transcription accuracy exceeds 95% with clear audio. That qualifier, with clear audio, is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Home offices, open floor plans, overlapping speakers, accents. Real conditions are messier than the demo.
Wait, the article mentions Veo 3 maxes out at 1080p but Veo 3.1 and later versions support 4K. The comparison in this article might already be a bit dated.
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.
My skepticism is on the learning effectiveness side. The article even admits companies justify adoption on cost savings and speed, not on whether people actually learn better. That gap matters if you care about training outcomes and not just training budgets.
That collaboration gap makes sense. An agent that writes code for one person does not automatically make that code more reviewable or understandable to the rest of the team. The social side of software development is not a coding problem.
Consolidating around $72K after briefly touching $73K is actually healthy price action. A rally that doesn't have brief pullbacks tends to be fragile.
AWS already applying Mythos to critical internal codebases and finding additional opportunities even in well-tested environments tells you something important. These are codebases with dedicated security teams doing continuous review. And there were still more vulnerabilities.
Not gonna lie, watching bears explain away every single price spike as a short squeeze with no fundamental backing is getting old. At some point the price is just the price.
Piccioli won designer of the year twice at the Fashion Awards while at Valentino. His move to Balenciaga was always going to be the most watched transition in fashion this year. Meghan being there for the debut is a real vote of confidence.
Has anyone tried styling this dress with combat boots? I'm thinking it could give an even edgier vibe for fall
I actually love how the structured bag balances out the whimsical shirt print. It's all about contrast
Those delicate bracelets add just the right amount of sparkle without going overboard
The geometric patterns in the jewelry remind me of art deco designs. Really elevates the whole minimalist vibe
That lipstick shade is perfect but I would probably go for a nude lip to let the dress be the star
Has anyone tried washing their denim in vinegar? I heard it helps maintain the color.
Could we see some palazzo pants options? They can be really flattering for pear shapes too
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