The certification path the article describes is solid but incomplete. Do not sleep on vendor-specific training from companies like Vertiv and Schneider Electric. Those credentials carry serious weight with hiring managers at major facilities.
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The certification path the article describes is solid but incomplete. Do not sleep on vendor-specific training from companies like Vertiv and Schneider Electric. Those credentials carry serious weight with hiring managers at major facilities.
Data center job postings surged 64 percent between 2023 and 2025 according to a recent analysis. For comparison, the broader economy saw 4 percent growth in the same roles. That gap is not closing anytime soon.
Hot take. Seoul Station's Necromancer handles the overpowered protagonist better than Solo Leveling because Woojin's ruthlessness has actual consequences rather than everyone just being awed by him constantly.
The panel composition point in the article deserves way more attention. The way the manhwa uses vertical scroll for reveals during boss fights is not something that translates easily when people describe it, you just have to experience it.
The article is written in a way that presupposes Nano Machine readers are a monolith who all agree it has the best combat art. The actual community is more divided. Some longtime murim fans think the tech elements are a crutch.
The enterprise adoption story is the one that should worry traditional SIs and consulting firms most. When Klarna and Deutsche Telekom are using this, it is no longer a founder tool.
The jump from $10M to $100M ARR in under six months is genuinely one of the fastest B2B growth stories in recent memory. Hard to argue with those numbers.
The fact that small errors do not require complete retakes anymore genuinely changes the economics of recording. That point in the article about recording confidence is real. It changed how I script and prepare.
When a company's revenue jumps from $10 million to $100 million in nine months, you pay attention. When that growth comes from an AI agent that builds entire applications autonomously, you realize something fundamental just changed in software development. Replit Agent represents that change, and the numbers prove developers are ready for it. Replit started as a browser-based coding environment for education. Students could write Python or JavaScript without installing anything locally. Teachers loved it because setup time vanished. But the company saw something bigger. If you could run code in the browser, why not let AI write that code? That question led to Agent 3, an AI that doesn't just suggest code completions. It builds entire applications from scratch.
The 300 minute free tier is pretty limiting for any real meeting schedule. If you have more than a couple hours of meetings weekly you will hit the ceiling fast. Pro plan is almost necessary for regular use.
The title promises that this makes designers and developers like each other. The reality is probably more like this makes them fight slightly less often. Which honestly might be enough.
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.
The free tier having a Made in Bolt badge is a completely reasonable business decision and people complaining about it need to relax. You want free hosting and free AI generation and no attribution? That math doesn't work.
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.
The fist thing at the India summit is going to live rent free in my head forever. Two grown men running trillion dollar companies and they couldn't just hold hands for one photo.
The model's own researchers described what they built as presaging an upcoming wave that can exploit vulnerabilities in ways that far outpace defenders. When your own team uses language like that about their own product, the caution is warranted.
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.
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.
The WhatsApp comparison is interesting since WhatsApp also does not show version history on edited messages. It seems like Meta has a consistent internal policy across its apps to show the edited label but hide original content.
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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