Hot take but The Gamer is massively overrated as a starting point. The early chapters are fun but the story meanders so badly that most beginners will drop it before it gets interesting.
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Hot take but The Gamer is massively overrated as a starting point. The early chapters are fun but the story meanders so badly that most beginners will drop it before it gets interesting.
As someone who uses Replit for teaching, the educational angle getting overshadowed by the agent hype is kind of wild. This thing started as a tool to help beginners learn by writing code. Now it builds apps so beginners never have to write code. Not sure how I feel about that transition.
To the person saying tools do not fix relationships, I think you are right in principle but wrong in this specific case. A lot of the tension comes from translation errors, not character flaws. Remove the translation problem and you remove a major source of friction.
The year 2026 marks a pivotal moment in the evolution of manhwa as a medium. What started as a trickle of Korean comics receiving anime adaptations has become a flood, with at least fifteen confirmed projects bringing beloved manhwa to animated life. This explosive growth wasn't accidental but the inevitable result of Solo Leveling's massive success proving that manhwa adaptations can compete with traditional manga anime in quality, popularity, and profitability. Studios across Japan and Korea are investing heavily in manhwa properties, recognizing that Korean storytelling brings fresh perspectives, innovative premises, and built-in fanbases eager to see their favorite series animated. The diversity of genres receiving adaptations demonstrates that manhwa appeal extends far beyond action and fantasy into romance, psychological thriller, sports, and slice-of-life territories.
For teams already standardized on GitHub, Copilot at $10 is probably still the rational default. The ecosystem integration is seamless and the price advantage is real even with Windsurf's current positioning.
The real story buried in all this is what happens to traditional enterprise software. When Anthropic launched Cowork and SaaS stocks lost two trillion in market cap in a day, that was the market finally pricing in what agentic AI actually means for Salesforce and ServiceNow.
There's a photograph from February 2026 that pretty much sums up the state of AI right now. At the India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi invited the world's tech leaders onstage for a group photo. Everyone held hands. Well, almost everyone. Sam Altman of OpenAI and Dario Amodei of Anthropic, standing right next to each other, refused to clasp hands and instead raised their fists separately. The internet, predictably, lost its mind. An awkward moment between OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei at an AI Summit captured the increasingly icy relations between two rival tech leaders who started off as colleagues. That's not just petty drama. It's a window into what may be the most consequential corporate rivalry in the technology world right now, one that's playing out in boardrooms, courtrooms, Super Bowl ads, and billion-dollar compute deals all at once.
Forty million dollars in annual recurring revenue. Six months. One browser-based platform. Those numbers would be impressive for any software company, but for Bolt.new, they represent something more significant: the moment when development environments moved permanently into the cloud and never looked back. Traditional software development has always required setup. Install Node.js, configure your environment, manage dependencies, set up local servers, troubleshoot version conflicts. Before writing a single line of code, developers spend hours or even days preparing their machines. Junior developers often spend their first week just getting their environment working. Bolt.new eliminated all of that with WebContainers technology.
App rankings are a lagging indicator. The question is what the engagement curve looks like sixty to ninety days from now when the launch buzz has completely settled.
To be fair, Instagram did add editable DMs back in 2024 so this is at least consistent. They are slowly working through the backlog of features other apps had ages ago.
The competitive dynamics right now are intense. Anthropic apparently released something called Mythos the same week that was so powerful they are only letting a handful of companies access it initially. Meta's moment got big headlines but the frontier is moving extremely fast.
That last point is maybe the most important thing to understand about where AI capability development is headed. The dangerous capabilities are not separate tracks, they emerge from the same general intelligence improvements. You cannot easily isolate them.
I actually own similar pants and found that a cream turtleneck looks amazing with them for winter. The versatility is incredible!
Actually disagree about the bracelets being too much. The stack adds movement when you're dancing and photographs amazingly