Question everything.

Joined October 2025
124 Photos and videos
😱This humanoid robot is getting uncomfortably real. UBTech has unveiled the UWORLD U1, a lifelike humanoid robot built for companionship as China pushes deeper into consumer robotics. Available in Lite, Pro, and Ultra versions, the U1 features silicone skin, emotional AI, natural conversation, and on-device processing for better privacy. It’s aimed at companionship, elder care, hospitality, and education, with the ability to recognize emotions, remember past interactions, and respond more naturally. UBTech says orders have already passed 13,361 units, signaling fast-growing demand for consumer humanoid robots.
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😮Elon Musk says the next five years could trigger a historic tech shift. He believes AI may surpass human intelligence and that hundreds of millions to a billion humanoid robots could be active by the early 2030s, massively boosting automation, productivity, and economic growth.
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🤯Scott Wu stood out in math early, competing internationally at just 14. Years later, that love of problem-solving led him to found Cognition, the company behind the AI coding agent Devin, which raised $1 billion in 2025 at a $26 billion valuation. His path shows how early curiosity, nurtured over time, can grow into one of the fastest-rising companies in AI.
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🐭Tom and Jerry just got a live-action makeover—powered by AI. The legendary cat-and-mouse duo has been reimagined as a cinematic, live-action film that looks surprisingly real while keeping the slapstick chaos and rivalry fans love. That’s what makes projects like this fun. For years, people wondered what classic cartoons would look like in live action. Now AI lets creators visualize those ideas without a Hollywood budget. It’s not about replacing the originals. It’s about experiencing familiar stories in a new way and opening the door to creative takes that were once too expensive or slow to make. As AI video improves, expect more iconic cartoons to get bold new visual styles—where nostalgia and innovation meet.
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What if one of anime’s most iconic battles looked like a Hollywood live-action film? That’s the magic of AI. @alter.anime7 recreated the Rock Lee vs. Gaara fight from Naruto in full photorealism, and for anyone who grew up with this scene, seeing it feel real hits hard. The sand moving on its own to stop every blow. Might Guy’s quiet thumbs-up that lets Lee drop the weights. The moment they crash down and the entire arena understands what he’d been carrying. Then the speed—Lee turning into a blur, smashing through Gaara’s defense with a single clean hit. A fight fans have watched a thousand times in animation, now looking like it belongs on a cinema screen. The jump from hand-drawn frames to this in barely a year is honestly wild to process.
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Pavel Durov built Telegram on a simple principle: private, unrestricted communication. That belief has guided the company from day one, even when it led to legal fights and government pressure. Agree or not, Durov has remained consistent with the values he says Telegram stands for.
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🤖Japan is reimagining human capability with a wearable robotic backpack that can give users up to six additional robotic arms for complex tasks. Developed through the JIZAI ARMS project, the modular exoskeleton lets users attach and control multiple robotic arms to help with carrying objects, creative work, industrial tasks, and human-robot collaboration. Instead of replacing human movement, the system is designed to extend it by adding robotic limbs that work alongside a person’s natural arms. Still a research platform, JIZAI ARMS offers a glimpse of how wearable robotics could reshape manufacturing, healthcare, entertainment, and everyday work by expanding what the human body can do. Source: designboom
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🤯China may have just demonstrated the most convincing form of real-world invisibility so far. Researchers showed a new material that can quickly change how it looks to match its surroundings. It responds to certain wavelengths of light and rearranges its pigments in real time, letting it blend into the background within seconds. The science is called self-adaptive photochromism. Instead of biological cells like a chameleon, the material uses organic dyes and donor–acceptor molecules that shift color under different lighting. In lab tests, it matched colored environments in under a minute. It can also be applied as a spray-on coating, meaning it could soon appear on clothing, equipment, or gear. The big question is whether technology like this makes the world safer—or much more dangerous.
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Meta is blending smart glasses with fashion by designing AI eyewear around Kylie Jenner’s personal style. The new launch introduces three frame lines—from the clean, rectangular Adventurer to the bold Fury, plus a slim oval Kylie-inspired design. Meta says the collection offers 26 combinations of frame colors and lenses, including clear, sun, polarized, and Transitions. With more than 70 styles now available, the push is clear: make AI glasses feel like everyday eyewear, not just a tech gadget.
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Dope Mankind reposted
⚡️BTCC가 증가하는 XRP 거래 수요를 지원하는 방법 XRP는 암호화폐 시장에서 가장 우여곡절이 많았던 자산 중 하나입니다. 수년간 이어진 규제 불확실성으로 인해 기관 투자자들의 관심을 받지 못했고, 트레이더들은 좀처럼 명확해지지 않는 상황을 지켜보며 기다려야 했습니다. @BTCCexchange READ HERE: coinlive.com/ko/news/how-btc…
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Jensen Huang says he doesn’t use AI to shortcut things he already knows. Instead, he uses it to explore topics he understands less and to test new ideas. In his view, AI only adds value if you’re still thinking—the better the questions, the better the answers. For Huang, AI is a tool to expand understanding, not replace it. The aim isn’t to think less, but to learn faster and think better.
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Dope Mankind reposted
Lee Kuan Yew was a genius
Lee Kuan Yew: “Air conditioning was a most important invention for us, perhaps one of the signal inventions of history. It changed the nature of civilization by making development possible in the tropics. Without air conditioning you can work only in the cool early-morning hours or at dusk. The first thing I did upon becoming prime minister was to install air conditioners in buildings where the civil service worked. This was key to public efficiency."
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👀Jeff Bezos says AI creates labor shortage. Jeff Bezos rejects the idea that AI will replace humans. He argues AI’s real impact is lowering the cost of turning ideas into products and businesses. Today, many ideas never happen because they take too much time, money, or effort. If AI removes those barriers, Bezos believes people will build more, not less.
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Ronaldo had a rough World Cup opener, and the internet is already asking if 41 is finally too old. So @worldcupanime gave fans the version they actually want — made entirely with AI. An exhausted Cristiano Ronaldo looks ready to break, until his Real Madrid prime self appears and passes the torch in a full My Hero Academia–style “One For All” moment. Glowing leg. Cosmic void. Generational power transferred. Then he smashes a screamer against Uzbekistan while Lionel Messi and Neymar watch in stunned silence. It’s pure anime wish fulfillment, landing exactly when fans needed it. Sometimes you don’t want realism. You want the legend to get one more impossible moment. And now, AI can turn that feeling into a cinematic video the world can’t stop watching.
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The CEO said AI would boost efficiency. What no one expected was a $500 million Claude bill showing up the next morning. When AI is baked into daily work, usage can explode overnight. Every prompt, test, and experiment adds up fast. The tech may be getting cheaper, but unlimited access can still turn AI into a shockingly expensive habit.
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Seedance 2.5 = Hollywood is screwed? This is the first video of Seedance 2.5, and it is without a doubt going to shake the whole (AI) video/film industry. ByteDance’s new generation reportedly jumps to 30-second clips and native 4K output, with around 50 reference inputs in a single pass and a licensing system for working with officially cleared film IP. That moves well past the roughly 15-second, 1080p ceiling of Seedance 2.0, which already became the top-ranked video generator in the world earlier this year. After a fake Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise fight scene from 2.0 went viral, one Hollywood screenwriter said it was likely over for the industry, and Disney and Paramount moved against ByteDance over copyright. The next few weeks are about to become insane for anyone. Social platforms, filmmakers, AI enthusiasts, traditional media, and anything inbetween. Buckle up.
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👿What if fiction’s four biggest villains sat at one table and instantly forgot the plan? You wouldn’t get schemes. You’d get ego. That’s the joke of this AI crossover. No plotting—just nonstop one-upping. Doctor Doom thinks everyone is beneath him. Thanos believes he’s the only one with a real vision. Ultron is embarrassed by the humans. Darkseid dismisses it all as noise. It’s not a villain summit—it’s a group project where everyone thinks they’re carrying the team. The best crossovers aren’t the fights. They’re the conversations these characters would rather die than have.
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🚨Anthropic kept Mythos away from the public for a reason—and a single Senate remark made that clearer. In a Mark Warner briefing of the Senate Intelligence Committee, he relayed claims from NSA and Cyber Command chief General Joshua Rudd about Anthropic’s unrestricted frontier model, Mythos. According to Warner, Rudd said it “broke into almost all of our classified systems, not in weeks, but in hours.” The incident was reportedly part of a classified red-team test designed to expose vulnerabilities before real adversaries could. The striking part wasn’t the access itself, but the speed—an AI model doing in hours what human teams would normally take weeks. Shortly after the briefing, the Commerce Department reportedly used export controls to pull Anthropic’s Fable 5 and Mythos offline. While both share the same base system, Mythos reportedly lacks the safety filters applied in Fable, a gap officials have flagged. It’s one of the clearest examples yet of a single AI capability triggering a national security response in the real world.
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😱Sam Altman says a major AI mistake was assuming researchers already knew the limits of scaling. For years, many believed bigger models would quickly hit a wall. Instead, scaling kept unlocking unexpected abilities. His broader point: when people tie their identity to a prediction, they resist changing their view. In fast-moving fields like AI, following the data matters more than defending old assumptions.
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JD Vance says AI gives governments and big institutions new power to monitor people and shape decisions at massive scale. He warns that opaque AI scoring systems could quietly influence major life outcomes. To him, the real danger isn’t job loss, but AI increasing control and inequality if misused.
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