For anyone who has been on the fence about starting manhwa, the current moment is genuinely the best possible time. More series are being adapted and localized than ever before and the quality ceiling keeps rising.
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For anyone who has been on the fence about starting manhwa, the current moment is genuinely the best possible time. More series are being adapted and localized than ever before and the quality ceiling keeps rising.
The Gamer is where I started seven years ago and it absolutely holds up as an introduction to the genre. The modern Korean setting makes the fantastical elements land differently than pure fantasy worlds.
In a medium filled with talented artists producing stunning work, making a claim about any series having the "best" art feels bold. Yet Nano Machine consistently delivers combat sequences so fluid, detailed, and visually innovative that even readers who don't typically care about martial arts stories find themselves captivated by the sheer spectacle on display. The series combines traditional murim aesthetics with futuristic sci-fi elements, creating a unique visual identity that stands apart from typical cultivation manhwa. The nano machine implanted in protagonist Cheon Yeo-Woon's body doesn't just give him power. It becomes a storytelling device that allows the artist to visualize techniques, energy flows, and combat analysis in ways other series can't replicate.
Different genre indeed but also a completely different artistic project. Comparing Nano Machine and The Boxer is like comparing action cinema to slow literary drama. Both can be excellent without competing.
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.
The article mentions teams use v0 output for dashboards and data tables. In my experience those are the hardest things to get right manually. If v0 can reliably produce a good data table with sorting and pagination I would use it for that alone.
Been following since the web novel days back in 2023 and watching new anime-only fans discover Ragnarok through the manhwa has been genuinely wholesome. The fanbase is growing in the right direction.
Knowledge workers spend an average of 18 hours per week in meetings. Much of that time involves routine status updates, recurring check-ins, and informational sessions where your physical presence adds minimal value. Otter.ai introduced a provocative concept called OtterPilot: an AI assistant that joins meetings autonomously when you can't attend, records everything, generates summaries, and answers questions about what happened. Connect Otter.ai to your calendar. The system monitors your scheduled meetings and automatically joins Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams calls when they start. OtterPilot records audio, generates real-time transcripts, identifies speakers, and creates AI summaries with action items. You receive a meeting briefing without attending the meeting yourself.
This is less about no-code and more about the collapse of the idea-to-execution gap. The value of technical skill has not disappeared, it has just moved up the stack.
The React-only limitation is going to matter less and less as the industry consolidates around React and Next.js. That consolidation is already well underway. v0 made a bet on the ecosystem and the ecosystem is winning.
The article says instead of searching, users will ask. Instead of browsing, users will generate. That future already exists for a lot of people. The question is whether Meta becomes the place they do it or whether they just do it in whatever app is already winning.
Hot take, if the Treasury meeting accomplished anything it was ensuring that the biggest banks will throw serious money at AI-native security tooling this quarter. The briefing was probably the most effective sales pitch CrowdStrike and Palo Alto never had to give.
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.
Instagram has rolled out a small but long overdue feature that users have been asking for years. You can now edit your comments after posting them. This simple change solves a very real frustration. Until now, fixing even the smallest typo meant deleting your comment and writing it all over again. That friction is finally gone. But there is a boundary. You get a 15 minute window after posting to make edits. Within that time, you can update your comment as many times as you want. There is also a layer of transparency built in. Once a comment is edited, others will be able to see that it has been modified. However, unlike platforms such as iMessage, Instagram does not show the edit history. What was originally written stays hidden.
Genius styling but I'd probably chicken out and throw a mesh top over the bralette
You could also dress this up with strappy heels and a clutch for dinner. So versatile!
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