Does creatine monohydrate actually help with brain function or is that just gym culture bleeding into nootropics discourse?
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Does creatine monohydrate actually help with brain function or is that just gym culture bleeding into nootropics discourse?
Jaafar Jackson plays Michael Jackson in the 2026 biopic Michael, and the story of how the 29-year-old newcomer landed the role is more interesting than the film itself. It started with a voice note. It involved a two-year global casting search with no formal auditions. It required Jaafar to keep the role secret from his own family for a full year. And it ended with his grandmother Katherine Jackson, the woman who knew Michael longest and loved him most, telling producers that her grandson didn't just resemble her son, he embodied him. After tracking every interview, behind-the-scenes video, and production report released since the film was announced, I can tell you that the choice of Jaafar was not nepotism, not a publicity play, and not the obvious pick everyone assumes it was. It was a hard-earned outcome of the most unusual casting process in recent biopic history, and here is how it actually happened.
The article mentions that the series does not require knowledge of previous Kim works, and I want to confirm that as someone who started blind. The storytelling is self-sufficient. However, knowing Bastard made certain visual choices in chapter 4 land with extra weight.
Season 2 ended on such a strong note that going into the final season feels genuinely earned. This series has built toward something the whole time.
The fact that Solo Leveling crossed 900k reviews on Crunchyroll while we're still waiting on season 3 news is both impressive and deeply frustrating.
The article glosses over the fact that the original novel has Arzen killing people including Elliot and treats him as a standard ice prince archetype to be melted. A character who murders the protagonist for a romantic deception is not just emotionally distant. That backstory deserves more scrutiny.
The webtoon having a satisfying ending confirmed is a huge deal for anyone nervous about committing to a long series. Go in knowing it sticks the landing.
Counterpoint, the nano machine conveniently solves every problem the plot creates for Cheon Yeo-Woon and at some point that removes tension. The art is excellent but the power scaling is not as thoughtfully handled as the article implies.
Is there a good place to start if someone wants to get into the source material before the anime? The manhwa on Webtoon or go straight for the physical novels from Ize Press?
Hot take, the nano machine gimmick actually limits the art because every major fight starts to follow the same structure. Scan, analyze, adapt, dominate. The visual beats become predictable.
The pent-up demand angle is actually the most underappreciated part of the story. There are millions of people who had ideas and the only thing stopping them was the technical execution barrier. That was a massive amount of latent economic value.
Revenue going from $2.8M to $150M annualized in about a year is actually more impressive than the $10M to $100M framing in the post. Those earlier numbers paint an even more dramatic picture of the transformation.
Nobody is talking about what happens to mid-tier videographers and on-camera talent in this scenario. The post celebrates efficiency but there are real livelihoods on the other side of that efficiency gain.
I appreciate that they use paid actors for stock avatars rather than scraped training data. That is not just an ethics checkbox. It is what makes enterprise legal teams comfortable signing the contract.
Genuinely curious, does anyone know if Anthropic's safety focus actually influences which enterprise customers choose them, or is it mostly just Claude Code being better at coding tasks? Because those are very different stories about why they're winning.
The comparison to Gmail in transit encryption is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Gmail is not a platform with documented ties to a foreign government that has legally mandated data-sharing requirements for its domestic companies.
The edited tag appears as soon as you save any edit, even within the 15 minute window. So yes, if someone is reading your comment while you are mid-correction they will see the tag before you have even finished.
The broader point the article makes about platforms becoming systems for managing conversations at scale is real. Comment editing is one piece of a much larger puzzle that includes moderation, AI, transparency, and now apparently legal liability.
The OpenBSD bug allowed a remote attacker to crash any machine running the OS just by connecting to it. That is not a minor edge case vulnerability. That is foundational and it sat there for nearly three decades.
In a rare divergence from industry norms, TikTok has confirmed it will not adopt end-to-end encryption (E2EE) for direct messages, breaking with nearly every major social media platform and reigniting one of the tech industry's most contentious debates. The Chinese-owned video platform told the BBC exclusively that it believes the privacy technology championed by Meta, Apple, and others as essential for user protection actually makes users less safe by creating "dark spaces" where harmful content can flourish beyond the reach of safety teams and law enforcement. The decision puts TikTok in direct opposition to its competitors while potentially exposing the company to fresh criticism over data protection, particularly given ongoing concerns about its ties to Beijing.
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