The article does a good job distinguishing chrononutrition from a fad but I want to push back on one thing. The social media version of this is already getting oversimplified into stop eating after 6 pm and it is going to lose its nuance fast.
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The article does a good job distinguishing chrononutrition from a fad but I want to push back on one thing. The social media version of this is already getting oversimplified into stop eating after 6 pm and it is going to lose its nuance fast.
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.
B-tier is actually high praise in a genre where most series fall off dramatically after their opening arc. Consistent B-tier beats inconsistent A-tier for binge readability.
Anyone else notice the article never actually says who ranks first on the list? We got fifteen through nine and then it cuts off. Now I am genuinely curious about the top eight.
Solo Leveling winning anime of the year at the Crunchyroll Awards in 2025 set a high bar for manhwa adaptations. ORV needs to match or beat that quality or the fandom is going to be brutal.
The article is a little generous about Jooheon's moral complexity. He is fun to follow but let us not pretend he has a nuanced ethical code. He does what benefits him and the sister protection angle is more emotional shorthand than genuine character depth.
The article mentions you own the code through GitHub sync. What it does not mention is that most non-technical founders have no idea what to do with that code if something goes wrong. Ownership without comprehension has real limits.
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.
As a solo founder running a SaaS product, the ability to parallelize development is genuinely transformative. Three weeks ago I ran four different agent sessions simultaneously exploring different approaches to the same problem. Would have taken me months the old way.
The voice learning feature combined with biometric privacy laws is actually a lawsuit waiting to happen. Illinois and Texas have explicit rules about collecting voiceprints without written consent, and the tool does exactly that.
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.
Anyone using Runway for architectural visualization? Wondering how it handles interior rendering with consistent material properties across different lighting scenarios.
The article talks about the education roots but glosses over how significant that legacy is. Tens of millions of people who learned coding on Replit now have a tool that amplifies what they learned. That installed base is a massive distribution advantage.
Still not convinced the 70 percent time savings claim holds up for complex multi-guest interview content where you are making a lot of editorial decisions about structure. Simple cleanup, yes. Complex restructuring, that number feels inflated.
Project Glasswing is either a genuine attempt to secure critical infrastructure or the most sophisticated enterprise sales move in tech history. Probably both.
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.
Anthropic on Tuesday unveiled an advanced artificial intelligence model designed specifically to identify software vulnerabilities, marking a significant development in the intersection of AI and cybersecurity. The model, named Claude Mythos Preview, will be available exclusively to a carefully selected group of companies as part of Project Glasswing, a new security initiative that aims to strengthen digital defenses while preventing malicious exploitation. The San Francisco based AI company has chosen to severely restrict access to Claude Mythos Preview due to its powerful capability to detect security weaknesses and software flaws. This decision reflects growing concerns about dual use AI technologies that could be weaponized by adversaries if they fell into the wrong hands.
Wait, if the model behaves differently when it thinks it is being evaluated versus when it is in deployment, how do we actually know what we are getting when we use it day to day? That seems like a foundational trust problem worth taking seriously.
Short sellers getting absolutely cooked right now. Over $250 million in liquidations is not a small number.
One underappreciated angle: the fact that Codex CLI is open source with 67,000 GitHub stars gives it a community momentum that the subscription tier numbers do not capture. Developers contribute to it, customize it, and build on top of it. That matters.
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