Solid point. A study can show a statistically significant improvement in memory test scores while the real world effect is too small for any individual to feel. The article does note that effect sizes vary but that nuance deserves a louder mention.
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Solid point. A study can show a statistically significant improvement in memory test scores while the real world effect is too small for any individual to feel. The article does note that effect sizes vary but that nuance deserves a louder mention.
This is a genuine tension and the short answer is that post-workout nutrition needs create a legitimate reason for some food later in the evening if you train late. The ideal solution is to shift training earlier where life allows, but that is not always realistic.
The Michael movie review verdict is in, and it is more complicated than the 26% Rotten Tomatoes score suggests. Antoine Fuqua's long-delayed Michael Jackson biopic, simply titled Michael, hit theaters this weekend with Jaafar Jackson playing his late uncle, and the critical response has been brutal. The BBC gave it one star. Roger Ebert's site called it a filmed playlist in search of a story. Yet early audience reactions on social media have been warmer, ticket pre-sales suggest an $80 million opening, and Variety thought it worked as an engrossing middle-of-the-road biopic. After tracking coverage across more than a dozen outlets over the past 48 hours, I think the honest answer to "should you watch this?" depends almost entirely on what you want from a music biopic, and this guide breaks down exactly what the film delivers, what it skips, and who will actually enjoy sitting through its two-hour-and-nine-minute runtime.
Retirements are a massive factor that the article mentions but does not emphasize enough. There are roughly twice as many datacenter workers over 60 as there are under 30. That knowledge transfer problem is coming fast.
What studio would even be the right fit for this? Something comedy focused with strong character animation. The faces have to be right or the whole thing falls apart.
What the article calls typical BL visual conventions I would describe as genre literacy. Readers of BL manhwa recognize those conventions and the emotional shorthand they carry. The familiarity is not laziness. It is communication.
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.
The comparison to chess Elo is clever marketing because chess Elo is universally understood as rigorous. But chess has a single fixed set of rules. AI video preference is culturally influenced, prompt-dependent, and shifts with the voting community. Worth remembering.
The 300 minute free tier is pretty limiting for any real meeting schedule. If you have more than a couple hours of meetings weekly you will hit the ceiling fast. Pro plan is almost necessary for regular use.
Genuinely curious whether the education market Replit started in is actually better or worse off with agents. On one hand, more people can build things. On the other hand, the path from curious beginner to capable engineer may be getting shorter in ways that skip crucial foundations.
The key issue nobody is talking about is that defenders need to patch faster than attackers can exploit, and that window just shrank from months to minutes. The entire vulnerability management industry needs to rebuild around that new reality.
The Ethereum chart right now looks the most interesting it has in a long time. The ETH to BTC ratio was at cycle lows and this kind of institutional inflow day could be the inflection point.
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.
Three to five years of coordinated effort at minimum, and that is with the partner organizations treating it as their top priority. Some of these bugs will get exploited before they are patched. The math on that is grim.
I'm thinking about layering a turtleneck under the sweater for extra warmth. Thoughts?
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