Season 4 feels like the writer is working with all the narrative debt the previous seasons accumulated and finally cashing it in. The emotional stakes feel grounded in everything that came before.
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Season 4 feels like the writer is working with all the narrative debt the previous seasons accumulated and finally cashing it in. The emotional stakes feel grounded in everything that came before.
Every time a new BL isekai drops everyone says it reinvents the formula. Usually it does not. Cautiously optimistic here but the track record of this claim is not great.
Anyone else find the other characters dismissing Bigang's warnings darkly funny? Like watching someone explain climate change to a medieval court.
Technical jargon is hit or miss in my experience. Common industry terms do okay. Very specialized or regional nomenclature can get garbled in ways that are worse than a gap because the error looks plausible.
The comparison to collaborative tools like Google Docs with visible revision logs is where I want social media to eventually end up. Not for every comment obviously but for anything that reaches significant visibility. Accountability at scale requires some form of history.
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.
Hybrid workflow is genuinely the answer here. Claude Code to generate and refine features, Codex to review before merging. Multiple developers on Reddit have settled on this pattern and it makes sense.
The feature will mostly be used to fix typos and nothing else. Let us not overanalyze a spell-check adjacent update.
The article mentions that Meta's advantage is not just the model but the network. That is genuinely true and genuinely underappreciated. The marginal cost of adding AI to a platform where people already spend hours a day is essentially zero. You are not acquiring users. You are activating them.
Not gonna lie, the visual coding feature where you can build mini-games from a prompt inside the app and then share them with friends is the first Meta AI capability that felt like something my younger siblings would actually use unprompted. That matters more than any benchmark.
what happens when the next model does this without any of the safety framing? Someone at another lab or a well-funded team is building the equivalent right now with no Project Glasswing equivalent planned.
Hot take: subscriptions are the wrong model for this entirely. Usage-based API pricing is how serious teams should be accessing these tools. Flat monthly caps are a consumer product design choice that does not translate well to professional workflows.
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.
When you hear “Paris Fashion Week,” your mind races to haute couture, bold statements, and the world’s most glamorous attendees. But on October 4, 2025, the scene got a surprise guest—Meghan Markle, making what might be her most talked-about entrance yet. To call it a “debut” feels almost too neat, as if she’s stepping into a world she’s never touched. Yet, Meghan’s gradual evolution as a style influencer has been anything but accidental. Her Paris moment isn’t just celebrity spectacle; it’s a statement, a pivot, and a nuanced step into a new chapter. Here’s my take on why this matters.
I'm obsessed with how the textures play together - the fuzzy clutch with the textured sweater is genius
Such a practical yet stylish combo. I'd probably add a crossbody bag for quick access to my phone though.
Not sure about wearing red to an art festival, might clash with the artwork. But perfect for so many other occasions