As someone who spent eight years in enterprise IT before moving to datacenter ops, the pay jump was real. Around 28 percent more in my first year, and that was before the current crunch got this bad.
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As someone who spent eight years in enterprise IT before moving to datacenter ops, the pay jump was real. Around 28 percent more in my first year, and that was before the current crunch got this bad.
One thing the article does not address is the comedy element. The synopsis describes Seongshik as an employee of the month type and there is clearly a tonal lightness to the setup that the serious thematic analysis undersells. Is this actually funny or is it grimly dramatic.
Omniscient Reader keeps getting pushed back. Last confirmed window I saw was late 2026 and even that seems optimistic given how ambitious the source material is.
The comparison to One Punch Man is honestly accurate. The comedy works the same way, where the absurdity comes from treating mundane things with completely disproportionate seriousness.
The Tapas season two English release starting November 2025 was great but then catching up to where translations currently are felt too fast, now it's just waiting again.
ufotable being rumored as the animation studio is the detail that would send me completely over the edge. Their particle effects and fluid motion for something like the constellation scenarios would be unreal.
The predictive combat modeling showing ghosted future possibilities is wild when you think about how technically difficult that is to draw. You have the present action AND the potential action in the same panel and somehow it never feels cluttered.
Can someone explain whether the custom avatar you build from your own footage is actually secure? Like who owns that data and what stops HeyGen from using your likeness in other ways? Genuine question not trying to be paranoid.
The free tier having a Made in Bolt badge is a completely reasonable business decision and people complaining about it need to relax. You want free hosting and free AI generation and no attribution? That math doesn't work.
Most people can edit a Google Doc. Delete some words, rearrange sentences, fix typos, add paragraphs. It's intuitive and requires no special training. Now imagine editing video the same way. That's Descript's core innovation, and it transformed video editing from a specialized skill requiring expensive software into something anyone who can edit text can do effectively. Descript started as a transcription tool for podcasters. Record your podcast, upload it to Descript, and get an accurate transcript for show notes. But the founders realized something bigger. If you have a perfect transcript synchronized to audio, you can edit the audio by editing the text. Delete a word from the transcript and that word disappears from the audio. That insight became the foundation for a complete editing platform.
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.
Speaking from experience in consumer product growth, a ranking spike like this almost always comes with a retention cliff two weeks later. The real question is whether Meta can convert this curiosity wave into daily active users. That is the metric that actually matters.
Hot take: the real winners in this trend are not the AI labs building chips, it is the chip design services companies and IP licensors who get paid no matter who wins the AI model competition.
As someone who works in enterprise software, the multi-agent architecture is what I keep coming back to. Spinning up parallel subagents to handle different parts of a task simultaneously is not a gimmick. That is genuinely how complex workflows need to be handled, and very few consumer-facing products have shipped that cleanly.
My only concern would be the crop top length with those jeans. Might need high waisted ones to avoid any gaps
I wear my red coat with everything but never thought to style it with distressed jeans. Definitely trying this tomorrow!