FALLING IN LOVE WITH YOONGI'S SMILE MORE AND MORE EACH DAY
Watch fans spent a week falling in love with colorful Royal Oak wristwatches that didn’t exist—then the real thing arrived. Now, fantasy is becoming a manufacturing opportunity.
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Danger! 🔥 High chances of falling in love 👀
Morrigan is back! Get this set now and unlock free selfie set 👀🔥
G-DRAGON X ELVIS
(Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) DELUXE EDITION is OUT NOW🔥
'Can't Help Falling In Love'➕🔂
Will AI create new job opportunities? My daughter Nova loves cats, and her favorite color is yellow. For her 7th birthday, we got a cat-themed cake in yellow by first using Gemini’s Nano Banana to design it, and then asking a baker to create it using delicious sponge cake and icing. My daughter was delighted by this unique creation, and the process created additional work for the baker (which I feel privileged to have been able to afford).
Many people are worried about AI taking peoples’ jobs. As a society we have a moral responsibility to take care of people whose livelihoods are harmed. At the same time, I see many opportunities for people to take on new jobs and grow their areas of responsibility.
We are still early on the path of AI generating a lot of new jobs. I don't know if baking AI-designed cakes will grow into a large business. (AI Fund is not pursuing this opportunity, because if we do, I will gain a lot of weight.) But throughout history, when people have invented tools that unleashed human creativity, large amounts of new and meaningful work have resulted. For instance, according to one study, over the past 150 years, falling employment in agriculture and manufacturing has been “more than offset by rapid growth in the caring, creative, technology, and business services sectors.”
AI is also growing the demand for many digital services, which can translate into more work for people creating, maintaining, selling, and expanding upon these services. For example, I used to carry out a limited number of web searches every day. Today, my agents carry out dramatically more web searches. For example, the Agentic Reviewer, which I started as a weekend project and Yixing Jiang then helped make much better, automatically reviews research articles. It uses a web search API to search for related work, and this generates a vastly larger number of web search queries a day than I have ever entered by hand.
The evolution of AI and software continues to accelerate, and the set of opportunities for things we can build still grows every day. I’ve stopped writing code by hand. More controversially, I’ve long stopped reading generated code. I realize I’m in the minority here, but I feel like I can get built most of what I want without having to look directly at coding syntax, and I operate at a higher level of abstraction using coding agents to manipulate code for me. Will conventional programming languages like Python and TypeScript go the way of assembly — where it gets generated and used, but without direct examination by a human developer — or will models compile directly from English prompts to byte code?
Either way, if every developer becomes 10x more productive, I don't think we’ll end up with 1/10th as many developers, because the demand for custom software has no practical ceiling. Instead, the number of people who develop software will grow massively. In fact, I’m seeing early signs of “X Engineer” jobs, such as Recruiting Engineer or Marketing Engineer, which are people who sit in a certain business function X to create software for that function.
One thing I’m convinced of based on my experience with Nova’s birthday cake: AI will allow us to have a batter life!
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Tragic accident: Woman falls into open manhole in Midtown Manhattan:
A 56-year-old woman tragically lost her life Monday night after stepping out of her parked Mercedes-Benz SUV and falling into an uncovered manhole at West 52nd Street and Fifth Avenue. She fell about 10 feet and was rushed to NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, where she was pronounced dead.
Con Edison is investigating how the manhole was left open.
My deepest condolences go out to her family and loved ones. This is a heartbreaking reminder to stay alert on city streets, especially at night.
(Video: AI)
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Would you date someone without knowing their age? And deeper than that: does age really matter in love?
I recently came across Netflix’s dating show "Age of Attraction", where people date each other without knowing one of the most basic “filters” we usually apply almost instantly: age.
It sounds like a reality TV gimmick, but the question behind it is actually fascinating. Because age is never just a number - Age carries assumptions.
We hear someone is 25, 35, 45, or 55, and immediately we start filling in the blanks: life stage, fertility, maturity, lifestyle, financial stability, emotional baggage, future plans, social status, even desirability.
Sometimes those assumptions are useful. A 25-year-old and a 45-year-old may genuinely be in very different places when it comes to marriage, children, career, energy, and worldview.
But sometimes those assumptions become a cage.
We may dismiss someone before discovering their emotional intelligence, curiosity, depth, humor, tenderness, or capacity to love.
What I find interesting is how differently cultures treat age in dating.
In many Asian cultures, age can still be tied closely to marriage timing, family expectations, fertility pressure, and “appropriate” life stages. A woman’s age is often judged more harshly than a man’s. A man who is older may be seen as stable; a woman who is older may be unfairly treated as “past her prime.”
In Western dating culture, there is often more language around individual choice, chemistry, and personal freedom. But even there, age gaps are not free from judgment. Older men dating younger women are normalized in some circles, criticized in others. Older women dating younger men are increasingly visible, but still often treated as a statement rather than simply a relationship.
So the real question is not only: “Does age matter?”
The better question may be: What exactly are we using age to measure?
Are we measuring maturity? Life goals? Power dynamics? Fertility? Social approval? Shared cultural references? Emotional readiness?
Or are we simply using age as a shortcut because true compatibility is harder to evaluate?
In dating, age can matter. But it should not matter alone.
A healthy relationship still needs aligned values, emotional maturity, mutual respect, attraction, timing, and the ability to build a life together.
Maybe age is just a clue. And like all clues, it needs context.
Not caring about age at all, and letting age replace discernment - both are dangerous!
So I’ll ask again: Would you date someone without knowing their age? And if the connection felt real, when would you want to know? 😉
Do you think people should only date people their age?
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To the best fans in the league, thank you for filling up the
@deltacenter, being loud and always 𝗦𝗛𝗢𝗪𝗜𝗡𝗚 𝗟𝗢𝗩𝗘 💜
We can't wait to get to work on next season and see all of you pack the house again 🫡
#
TakeNote#
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