Bookmarks 2025-08-21T19:32:44.297Z
by Owen Kibel
26 min read
Bookmarks for 2025-08-21T19:32:44.297Z
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Trump Orders Border Wall Painted Black To Make It Hotter, Deter Illegal Aliens From Climbing - YouTube Added: Aug 21, 2025
Trump Orders Border Wall Painted Black To Make It Hotter, Deter Illegal Aliens From Climbing
Site: YouTube
SUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/Join - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLwNTXWEjVd2qIHLcXxQWxA/joinHosts: Phil @PhilThatRem...

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Trump Civil Fraud Judgement OVERTURNED On Appeal, PROVING Corruption - YouTube Added: Aug 21, 2025
Trump Civil Fraud Judgement OVERTURNED On Appeal, PROVING Corruption
Site: YouTube
Become A Memberhttp://youtube.com/timcastnews/joinThe Green Room - https://rumble.com/playlists/aa56qw_g-j0BUY CAST BREW COFFEE TO FIGHT BACK - https://castb...

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Founder of Google's Generative AI Team Says Don't Even Bother Getting a Law or Medical Degree, Because AI's Going to Destroy Both Those Careers Before You Can Even Graduate
Added: Aug 21, 2025Founder of Google's Generative AI Team Says Don't Even Bother Getting a Law or Medical Degree, Because AI's Going to Destroy Both Those Careers Before You Can Even Graduate
Site: Futurism
The man behind Google's first generative AI program has some stark advice for advanced degree-seekers: don't do it, because AI will beat you.

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Massive Legal Victory as $500 Million Judgment Against Trump THROWN OUT, w/ Holloway and Chamberlain - YouTube Added: Aug 21, 2025
Massive Legal Victory as $500 Million Judgment Against Trump THROWN OUT, w/ Holloway and Chamberlain
Site: YouTube
Megyn Kelly is joined by MK True Crime contributor Phil Holloway and Will Chamberlain of the Article III Project to discuss President Trumpâs massive legal v...

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Vice President JD Vance Delivers Remarks at ALTA Refrigeration, Inc. - YouTube Added: Aug 21, 2025
Vice President JD Vance Delivers Remarks at ALTA Refrigeration, Inc.
Site: YouTube
Peachtree City, GA

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Reexamining the extinction of the largest known primate in history - Earth.com Added: Aug 21, 2025
Searching for answers behind the extinction of the largest primate that ever lived
Site: Earth.com
Researchers are looking for answers behind the mystery of Gigantopithecus blacki, the largest known primate that ever lived.

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I found the only note-taking app youâll need to save YouTube videos, web pages, and PDFs (and itâs totally free)
Added: Aug 21, 2025** I found the only note-taking app youâll need to save YouTube videos, web pages, and PDFs (and itâs totally free)**
Site: XDA
Finally, a note-taking tool that just works

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Why AI gets stuck in infinite loops â but conscious minds donât - Big Think
Added: Aug 21, 2025Why AI gets stuck in infinite loops â but conscious minds donât
Site: Big Think
Anil Seth suggests the difference is that living beings are rooted in time and entropy, a grounding that may be essential for consciousness.

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Exceptional storytelling and the myth of superhuman AI - Big Think
Added: Aug 21, 2025Exceptional storytelling and the myth of superhuman AI
Site: Big Think
Welcome to The Nightcrawler â a weekly newsletter from Eric Markowitz covering tech, innovation, and long-term thinking.

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Do Beautiful Birds Have an Evolutionary Advantage? | Quanta Magazine
Added: Aug 21, 2025Do Beautiful Birds Have an Evolutionary Advantage? | Quanta Magazine
Site: Quanta Magazine
Richard Prum explains why he thinks feathers and vibrant traits in birds evolved not solely for survival, but also through aesthetic choice.

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Want to learn Linux? These 5 games make it fun - and they're free | ZDNET
Added: Aug 21, 2025Want to learn Linux? These 5 games make it fun - and they're free
Site: ZDNET
Does the thought of learning Linux seem daunting? It doesn't have to be. Start with a few games.

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AI Isnât Coming for Hollywood. It's Already Arrived | WIRED Added: Aug 21, 2025
AI Isnât Coming for Hollywood. It's Already Arrived
Site: WIRED
An early winner in the generative AI wars was near collapseâthen bet everything on a star-studded comeback. Can Stability AI beat the competition?
It was February 2024, and the singer had invited guests to her $22.5 million oceanside estate in Malibu to mark the launch of a skin-care nonprofit. One of the organizationâs trustees was her boyfriend, whose day job was running the Parker Foundation. In the candlelit space, beside floor-to-ceiling windows that looked out over the Pacific, Parkerâs people mingled with Gagaâs, nibbling focaccia and branzino alla brace to music from a string quartet (Grammy-winning, of course). Prem Akkaraju, one of Parkerâs close friends and business partners, arrived in a tailored suit, his thick hair coifed to perfection. The two men had known each other since Parker was at Facebook and Akkaraju was in the music industry. Over the years, theyâd tried unsuccessfully to launch a movie streaming platform together andâmuch more successfullyâhad taken over a renowned visual effects company. Lately they had been talking about starting an AI venture. That evening at Gagaâs, Akkaraju found himself sitting next to an investor in Stability AI, the company that launched the wildly popular text-to-image generator Stable Diffusion in 2022. Despite its early success, Stability was âcircling the drain,â the investor recalls. It was âwithin days of not having options.â He told Akkaraju: âYou should take Stability and make it into the Hollywood-friendly AI model.â Hollywood did seem to be in need of a friend. Since 2022, the number of films and TV shows made in the United States had dropped by about 40 percent, thanks to ballooning production costs at home, competition from overseas, and long-running labor disputes everywhere. AI promised to bring the numbers back up by speeding production and slashing costs: Let computers automate the grunt work of translating dialog, adding visual effects frame by painstaking frame, and editing boom microphones out of a zillion shots. Maybe one day they could even write scripts and act! Two of the industryâs biggest unions had gone on strike in part to obtain assurances that generative AI wouldnât replace union jobs in the near term. But every major studio and streaming service was racing to figure out its AI strategy, and a host of startupsâLuma, Runway, Asteriaâwas working on tools to pitch them. Akkaraju saw the opportunity in front of him. Stability AI had the technology. It just needed that Hollywood finish. As far as he could tell, there was only one problem. Didnât the company already have a CEO? The text-to-image generator was a breakout hit, garnering 10 million users in two months. âIt was fairly close to state-of-the-art,â says Maneesh Agrawala, a computer science professor at Stanford University. Openness was core to the modelâs success. âIt allowed researchers to essentially extend the model, fine-tune it, and it spurred a whole community into action in terms of creating enhancements and add-ons,â Agrawala says. By October 2022, Stability AI had only 77 employees, but with thousands of times that many people in the wider Stable Diffusion community, it could compete with its bigger rivals. Mostaque raised $101 million in a seed round from venture capital firms and hedge funds including Coatue and Lightspeed (the final million, he tells me, was for good luck). The company was a unicorn. Employees from this period describe Mostaque as a visionary. He spoke eloquently about the need to democratize access to artificial intelligence. In the not-too-distant future, Mostaque told employees, the company would solve complex biomedical problems and generate season eight of Game of Thrones. âIt was an incredibly fun and chaotic startup that was throwing a lot of spaghetti at the wall, and some of it stuck really hard,â a former high-ranking employee tells me. (Like others I spoke with, the employee requested anonymity to speak freely about Mostaque and the company.) Mostaque was thrilled by the success. But he was also in over his head. âI was brand-new to this,â he says. âWith my Aspergers and ADHD, I was like, âWhat's going on?ââ Mostaque talks fast, his tone matter-of-fact: âOn the research side, we did really good things. The other side I was not so good at, which was the management side.â Two former employees told me that they felt Mostaque didnât think deeply about building a marketable product. âHe just wanted to build models,â one said. The companyâs success brought heightened scrutiny. In January 2023, Getty Images sued Stability AI in Londonâs High Court for allegedly training its models on 12 million proprietary photographs. The company filed a similar suit in the US weeks later. In the stateside complaint, Getty accused the AI firm of âbrazen theft and freeriding.â Then, in June 2023, Forbes published a blockbuster story alleging that Mostaque had inflated his credentials and misrepresented the business in pitch decks to his investors. The article also claimed that Mostaque had received only a bachelorâs degree from Oxford, not a masterâs. (Mostaque says that he earned both, but a clerical error on his part was responsible for the mix-up.) Whatâs more, Stability reportedly owed millions of dollars to Amazon Web Services, which provided the computing power for its model. Though Mostaque had spoken of a partnership, Stabilityâs spokesperson acknowledged to Forbes that it was in fact a run-of-the-mill cloud services agreement with a standard discount. Mostaque had answers for all of this, but investors lost confidence anyway. Four months after the article came out, VCs from both Coatue and Lightspeed left the board of directors, signaling they no longer had faith in the business. By the end of the year, the companyâs head of research, chief operating officer, general counsel, and head of human resources had left as well. Many of Stabilityâs prominent researchers would follow. Under pressure from investors, Mostaque finally left the company on March 22, 2024âjust a few weeks after Lady Gagaâs greenhouse soiree. Akkaraju and Parker wasted no time in taking over Stability, installing Akkaraju as CEO and Parker as chairman of the board. They never spoke to Mostaque, although the former CEO says he reached out to offer his support. The pair set about trying to remake Stability AI for the moment. Not long after they took over, the competition got fiercer. That September, another startup, Runway, signed the AI industryâs first big deal with a movie studio. Runway would get access to Lionsgateâs proprietary catalog of movies as training data and develop tools for the studio. âThe time it takes to go from idea to execution is just shrinkingâlike a lot,â says CristĂłbal Valenzuela, CEO of Runway. âYou can do things in just a couple of minutes that used to take two weeks.â In the coming years, he predicts, âyou will have teams of two, three, four people making the work that used to require armies and hundreds of millions of dollars.â The deal with Lionsgate pushed the AI-fication of Hollywood into overdrive. âI can tell you, last year when I came to Los Angeles versus today, itâs night and day,â says Amit Jain, CEO of Luma, another Stability competitor. âLast year it was âLetâs prototype, letâs proof-of-conceptââthey were deferring the inevitable. This year itâs a whole different tone.â Moonvalley, an AI company founded by former Google DeepMind researchers (and the parent company of Asteria, an AI film studio cofounded by the actor Natasha Lyonne), recently told Time magazine that more than a dozen major Hollywood studios are testing its latest modelâsignaling openness to the technology, if not yet a full embrace. Iâm sitting not at his TED Talk but in his $20 million mansion near Beverly Hills, on an immaculate overstuffed white couch overlooking a manicured garden. Akkaraju is fit, with a gleaming white smile and a button-up that shows off his biceps. His eye contact and handshake are equally strong. Early on in his tenure, Akkaraju says, he decided that Stability would no longer compete with OpenAI and Google on building frontier models. Instead, it would create apps that sat on top of those models, freeing the company from enormous computing costs. Akkaraju negotiated a new deal with Stability AIâs cloud computing vendors, wiping away the companyâs massive debt. Asked for specifics on how this came about, Akkaraju, through a spokesperson, demurred. Investors, like Coatue, came flocking back. Where Mostaque painted a picture of AI solving the worldâs most difficult problems, what Akkaraju is building, in brutally unsexy terms, is a software-as-a-service company for Hollywood. The goal is not to generate films, he says, but to use AI to augment the tools that filmmakers already use. âI really do think that our differentiation is having the creator in the center,â Akkaraju says. âI don't see any other AI company that has James Cameron on its board.â Yes, the irony writes itself: The guy who once had a fever dream about murderous machines while âsick and brokeâ in Rome and proceeded to turn it into The Terminatorâthe creator of Skynet!âis on the board of an AI company. Whatâs doubly surprising, though, is that Cameron is on the board of an AI company run by Parker and Akkaraju. A decade ago, Cameron was helping lead Hollywoodâs charge against them. He didnât appreciate the premise of their streaming platform, the Screening Room, which let people watch new releases at home for $50 on the same day they came out in theaters. Cameron reportedly told a crowd at CinemaCon that he was âcommitted to the theater experience.â In the years that followed, none of the major studios publicly announced deals with the Screening Room, and in 2020 the company rebranded as SR Labs. That same year, Akkaraju and Parker took over Weta Digital, the visual effects studio behind blockbusters such as Lord of the Rings, Game of Thrones, and Cameronâs Avatar movies. Weta developed virtual cameras that let Cameron see a real-time rendering of the artificial environment through a viewfinder, as if he were filming on location in the fictional world of Pandora. One night, Cameron, Akkaraju, and Parker met for dinner to discuss how technology was changing the film industry. âThe tequila was flowing,â Cameron recalls. âA friendship formed.â Any tension that had existed over the Screening Room melted away. (âI never really talked with him about it,â Akkaraju says. âHe knew, and I knew. It was very funny.â) So Cameron is on the board, but is the âcreator in the center,â as Akkaraju said? When I spoke with Parker, he emphasized the importance of using open source models and spoke of ârespect for creators and respect for IP.â He added: âThat sounds potentially kind of rich, coming from me, given my past association with Napster and early social media. But it is a lesson learned.â In June, the company scored a major win when Getty dropped its copyright infringement claims from a broader lawsuit as the trial neared a close in the UK. The US trial is ongoing. Akkaraju said the company âsources data from publicly available and licensed datasets for training and fine-tuning,â and that when âcreating solutions for a clientâ it âfine-tunes using the dataset provided by the client.â When I asked Akkaraju if the company trained exclusively on free or licensed data, he responded: âWell, thatâs the majority of what weâre using, for sure.â Then thereâs the problem of consistency. Filmmakers need to be able to tweak a scene in minute ways, but thatâs not possible with most of the image and video generators on the market. Enter the same prompt into a chatbot 10 times and you will likely get 10 different responses. âThat doesn't work at all in a VFX workflow,â Cameron says. âWe need higher resolution, we need higher repeatability. We need controllability at levels that aren't quite there yet.â That hasnât stopped filmmakers from experimenting. Almost every person I spoke with for this story said that AI is already a core part of the âprevizâ process, where scenes are mapped out before a shoot. The process can create new inefficiencies. âThe inefficiency in the old system was really the information gap between what I see and what I imagine I want moving forward,â says Luisa Huang, cofounder of Toonstar, a tech-forward animation company. âWith AI, the inefficiency becomes âHere's a version, here's another version, here's another version.ââ One of the first people in Hollywood to admit to using generative AI in the final frame is Jon Erwin, the director and producer of Amazonâs biblical epic House of David. He became interested in the technology while shooting the first season of the show in Greece. âI noticed that my production designer was able to visualize ideas almost in real time,â he says. âI was like, âTell me exactly how youâre doing what youâre doing. What are you using, magician?ââ he recalls. Erwin started playing around with the tools himself. âI felt directly tethered to my imagination,â he says. Eventually, he made a presentation for Amazon outlining how he wanted to use generative AI in his production. The company was supportive. âWe film everything we can for realâit still takes hundreds of people,â Erwin tells me. âBut weâre able to do it at about a third of the budget of some of these bigger shows in our same genre, and weâre able to do it twice as fast.â A burning-forest scene in House of David would have been too expensive to do with practical effects, he says, so AI created what audiences saw. Erwin says he has spoken with the team at Stability but has ânot been able to use their tools successfully on a show at scale.â The comment reflects a theme I found in my reporting: While I was able to identify a number of filmmakers who admitted to toying around with Stabilityâs text-to-image generators, none used the tools professionallyâat least not yet. The taboo on studios acknowledging their embrace of AI seems to be softening. In July, Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos told investors the company had allowed âgen AI final footageâ to appear in one of its original series for the first time. He said the decision sped up production tenfold and dramatically cut costs. âWe remain convinced that AI represents an incredible opportunity to help creators make films and series better, not just cheaper,â he said. âInstead of spending hours or days or weeks building a virtual environment and rehearsing your shots, the idea here is actually that you can just take a single image and generate a concept,â Basse says. Rob Legato, Stabilityâs chief pipeline architect, seems pleased. A veteran visual effects specialist who worked on Wolf of Wall Street and Avatar, Legato joined the company in March. He was up until 2 am the night before shooting a film and has arrived at this meeting to act as both a company executive and a beta tester. The only issue, Legato says, is the drop-down menu. âYou probably want to combine them and have a slider,â he says. Stability AIâs offerings are still in their early days. Even Legato admits the version of the virtual camera tool we are looking at has a ways to go before it could be used by a professional. âRight off the bat my job is unfortunately to be critical,â he says. The conversation drifts to rotoscoping. Legato explains that this process, where an artist sketches over a scene frame by frame, used to take hundreds of hours and was reserved for entry-level animators. Now AI can automatically isolate part of an image and add visual effects. âYouâd never want your child to work on roto,â he tells me. The comment is meant to sound optimistic, but it gets to a looming fear about how AI will impact Hollywood. Namely, that the technology will lead to widespread job losses. âI hear artists at VFX companies say, âHey, I don't want to get replaced.â Of course you don't want to get replaced!â says Cameron. âIf you guys are going to lose your jobs, you're going to lose your jobs over the work drying up versus getting bumped aside by these gen AI models.â The idea, echoed by Akkaraju and Parker, is that as movies become cheaper to produce, more films will get made and overall employment will rise. When pressed on this point, Akkaraju reverts to an extended metaphor. âEvery major transition or technological invention is always met with apprehension at first, and then acceptance, and then it's obvious,â he says. âWhen ATMs rolled out in the â80s, all the tellers were really up in arms. They were like, âThatâs our job. We give withdrawals, we take deposits, and now youâre having this machine do it.â Whatâs happened since then is that there are more teller jobs than ever before, and their average pay is higher, even adjusted for inflation.â Whether the coup that began in Lady Gagaâs greenhouse ultimately saves Stability AI, the AI revolution is here and already transforming Hollywood. That collapsing building, that burning forest, that crowd of people you see when you stream a show or go to the movie theater? One person with a keyboard couldâve made them. The thing about that bank-teller anecdote is that itâs often used by techno-optimistsâincluding Stability AI investor Eric Schmidt. What they donât mention is that the number of bank tellers peaked around 2015. Since then, itâs been on the decline. Update: 8/20/2025, 4:45 PM EDT: WIRED has corrected the spelling of Jon Erwin's name. WIRED has also clarified details about Stability AI's training data, as well as its investors, and removed a reference to Stable Diffusion 1.5.
Let us know what you think about this article. Submit a letter to the editor at mail@wired.com.

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GOD BLESS AMERICA đşđ¸ - YouTube Added: Aug 21, 2025
GOD BLESS AMERICA đşđ¸
Site: YouTube

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Site: X (formerly Twitter)
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Site: X (formerly Twitter)
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Fossil discovery changes perception of prehistoric men and women - Earth.com Added: Aug 21, 2025
Fossil discovery changes what we thought we knew about prehistoric men and women
Site: Earth.com
A study compares Pliocene fossils: significant sexual dimorphism in Australopithecus; A. afarensis surpasses A. africanus.

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Texas Republicans Win, House Passes Redistricting Map, GOP Looks To Gain 5 Seats | Timcast IRL - YouTube Added: Aug 21, 2025
Texas Republicans Win, House Passes Redistricting Map, GOP Looks To Gain 5 Seats | Timcast IRL
Site: YouTube
SUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/Join - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLwNTXWEjVd2qIHLcXxQWxA/joinHosts: Phil @PhilThatRem...

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A Coding Implementation to Build a Complete Self-Hosted LLM Workflow with Ollama, REST API, and Gradio Chat Interface
Site: MarkTechPost
A Coding Implementation to Build a Complete Self-Hosted LLM Workflow with Ollama, REST API, and Gradio Chat Interface

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A 120B parameter model can now run on a PCâ | Cybernews Added: Aug 21, 2025
Experiment: I ran a 120 billion parameter AI model on a budget GPU
Site: Cybernews
A 120 billion parameter AI model can run efficiently on consumer-grade hardware with a budget GPU and sufficient RAM, thanks to the Mixture of Experts (MoE) technique.

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SpaceX has built the machine to build the machine. But what about the machine? - Ars Technica
Added: Aug 21, 2025SpaceX has built the machine to build the machine. But what about the machine?
Site: Ars Technica
SpaceX has built an impressive production site in Texas. Will Starship success follow?

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Gemini 2.5 Deep Think Parallelizes Creative Problem-Solving - InfoQ Added: Aug 20, 2025
**Gemini 2.5 Deep Think Parallelizes Creative Problem-Solving **
Site: InfoQ
As part of Google AI Ultra subscription, Gemini 2.5 Deep Think is a model designed for creative problem-solving through the use of parallel thinking techniques and extended inference time.

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The Left ATTACKS Jillian Michaels - YouTube Added: Aug 20, 2025
The Left ATTACKS Jillian Michaels
Site: YouTube
SUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/Join - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLwNTXWEjVd2qIHLcXxQWxA/joinHosts: Tim @Timcast (eve...

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Is Toxic Empathy Poisoning the Left? | Interesting Times with Ross Douthat - YouTube Added: Aug 20, 2025
Is Toxic Empathy Poisoning the Left? | Interesting Times with Ross Douthat
Site: YouTube
Allie Beth Stuckey , conservative Christian podcaster, joins Ross on âInteresting Timesâ this week to explain why âtoxic empathyâ has a stranglehold on polit...

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Site: X (formerly Twitter)
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Site: X (formerly Twitter)
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Did a Human Write That? Detect AI Writing With These Tips - CNET
Added: Aug 20, 2025Did a Human Write That? Detect AI Writing With These Tips
Site: CNET
AI might be able to write, but there are certain tells that let you know when a human didn't do the writing. Use these tricks to separate real writing from AI.

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Elon Musk Randomly Drops in on Small Town; Reminds Everyone He Is Still Canadian Added: Aug 20, 2025
Elon Musk Randomly Drops in on Small Town; Reminds Everyone He Is Still Canadian
Site: Gizmodo
Muskâs visits and Canadian ties have fueled debate

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CachyOS hits the top of the Distrowatch charts ⢠The Register Added: Aug 20, 2025
- CachyOS hits the top of the Distrowatch charts
- Performance-tuned and optimized spin seems to be winning fans

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Dems in Decline, Newsom's Bizarre Trump Troll, Truth About DC Crime, w/ Halperin, Spicer, Turrentine - YouTube Added: Aug 20, 2025
Dems in Decline, Newsom's Bizarre Trump Troll, Truth About DC Crime, w/ Halperin, Spicer, Turrentine
Site: YouTube
Megyn Kelly is joined by Mark Halperin, host of Next Up, and Sean Spicer and Dan Turrentine, co-hosts of The Morning Meeting, to discuss the latest data show...

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Lee Zeldin Bombshell! Bidenâs EPA Slush Fund Exposed - YouTube Added: Aug 20, 2025
Lee Zeldin Bombshell! Bidenâs EPA Slush Fund Exposed
Site: YouTube
EPA Chief Lee Zeldin reveals to Miranda Devine how the Biden administration turned âclimate justiceâ into a multi-billion dollar slush fundâchanneling a fort...

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Victor Davis Hanson: What the Left Gets Wrong About Trump-Putin Summit - YouTube Added: Aug 20, 2025
Victor Davis Hanson: What the Left Gets Wrong About Trump-Putin Summit
Site: YouTube
Within 48 hours of the Trump-Putin summit in Alaska, Trump rallied major European leadersâalongside Ukrainian President Zelenskyyâto present a united front a...

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Victor Davis Hanson: Gavin Newsomâs $250M Redistricting Power Grab - YouTube Added: Aug 20, 2025
Victor Davis Hanson: Gavin Newsomâs $250M Redistricting Power Grab
Site: YouTube
California is launching a $250 million redistricting effort to reshape all 52 congressional seats, with Gov. Gavin Newsomâeyeing a 2028 presidential runâunde...

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Jews vs. Rome: VDH Interviews Barry Strauss on New Book - YouTube Added: Aug 20, 2025
Jews vs. Rome: VDH Interviews Barry Strauss on New Book
Site: YouTube
Description: Victor Davis Hanson talks with Barry Strauss about "Jews Vs Rome: Two Centuries of Rebellion Against the Worldâs Mightiest Empireâ scheduled for...

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Google launches Gemini for Home: New, more powerful AI assistant Added: Aug 20, 2025
Gemini for Home: Your householdâs new, more helpful assistant
Site: Google
Learn more about Gemini for Home, coming to Google Home products like Nest speakers this fall.

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Putin and Zelensky: In Search of the DMZ - YouTube Added: Aug 20, 2025
Putin and Zelensky: In Search of the DMZ
Site: YouTube
Our Sponsor: Getting your meds shouldnât be a battle.All Family Pharmacy has what you need with the doctorâs prescription included. đ Call (561) 717-6794Our...

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An incredible escape method: a lizard that can breathe underwater. #wildlife #animals #shorts - YouTube Added: Aug 20, 2025
An incredible escape method: a lizard that can breathe underwater. #wildlife #animals #shorts
Site: YouTube

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faribel - Jewish English Lexicon Added: Aug 20, 2025
faribel | Jewish English Lexicon
Check out faribel on the Jewish English Lexicon
A Ballad of the Bookmarks
The border wall, painted black and bold, A story in the heat, or so we're told. Judgments fly, then fall like rain, As legal battles cause much pain.
From Google's mind, a warning clear, Law and medicine, held so dear, Now threatened by the digital surge, As AI's power starts to urge.
JD Vance speaks, a structured line, While prehistoric primates pine For lives long gone, a vanished age, Across Earth's vast and ancient stage.
A note-taking app, a digital find, To save the web, for heart and mind. AI's loops, a curious maze, While conscious thought in time does blaze.
In Hollywood's glitz, a story spun, Of AI's rise, and battles won. From pixels born, to screens alight, A new creation, day and night.
Do birds of beauty, in their flight, Hold an advantage, shining bright? Or Linux games, a path to find, For curious souls, and seeking kind?
From X's chatter, voices rise, Of politics and veiled disguise. San Jose hopes, for business bright, While Texas maps, in partisan light.
A giant model, on PC's screen, A self-hosted workflow, sharp and keen. SpaceX builds, with rockets grand, To reach the stars, across the land.
Gemini thinks, in parallel ways, While Jillian Michaels faces days Of critique, from voices loud, Lost in the empathetic crowd.
As Musk arrives, in towns unseen, And CachyOS tops the seen Distrowatch charts, a Linux plea, For speed and power, wild and free.
Dems in decline, a narrative told, With EPA funds, bought and sold. Hanson speaks of summits past, And redistricting, shadows cast.
From Rome's old might, to nature's lore, A lizard breathes, beneath the shore. Gemini for home, a helpful guide, As past and future, side-by-side.