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AI and Creativity: What Gets Lost in the Process
AI tools are reshaping how humans create. Marcus Obi examines what that means for the experience of making something—and what we risk handing away.
Light Rail Automation Borrows Tech from Cars and Satellites
Light Rail Automation Borrows Tech from Cars and Satellites
Cities are automating light rail using car sensors and satellite positioning. Here's what that shift means for urban transit, safety, labor, and city design.
Tau: A Minimal Coding Agent Built to Teach
Tau: A Minimal Coding Agent Built to Teach
Hugging Face's Tau is a Python coding agent designed not to compete with Claude Code or Aider, but to show developers exactly how agents work under the hood.
Brian Keating on What Came Before the Big Bang
Brian Keating on What Came Before the Big Bang
Cosmologist Brian Keating explains the multiverse, dark energy, string theory's fatal flaw, and why finding extraterrestrial wisdom matters more than finding aliens.
How William Penn's 1682 Grid Still Shapes Philadelphia
How William Penn's 1682 Grid Still Shapes Philadelphia
From Penn's Quaker grid to Ed Bacon's urban renewal, Daniel Steiner's video traces how Philadelphia's original plan survived — and who it cost along the way.
How Billionaires Think About Luck, Money, and People
How Billionaires Think About Luck, Money, and People
Daniel Priestley shares what he's observed from years spent around ultra-wealthy entrepreneurs—patterns around luck, currency, and exits worth examining.
Rockefeller, Morgan, and Ford: Who Really Built America
Rockefeller, Morgan, and Ford: Who Really Built America
How Rockefeller, Morgan, Ford, and immigrant entrepreneurs shaped American capitalism — and who paid the price along the way.
The Hard Ceiling on Human Lifespan, Explained
The Hard Ceiling on Human Lifespan, Explained
Can science push humans past 115? From longevity clinics to cellular reprogramming, here's what the evidence actually says—and what it doesn't.
Which "Untranslatable" Words Are Real?
Which "Untranslatable" Words Are Real?
From hygge to mamihlapinatapai, RobWords fact-checks the internet's favourite "untranslatable" words — and finds gems, exaggerations, and outright fiction.
How the Square Root of 2 Shook Ancient Greek Mathematics
How the Square Root of 2 Shook Ancient Greek Mathematics
The Pythagoreans believed whole numbers governed all of reality. One diagonal line—and one brave mathematician—proved them catastrophically wrong.
Why Physics Still Cannot Explain What Time Actually Is
Why Physics Still Cannot Explain What Time Actually Is
Philosopher Simon Saunders tells Curt Jaimungal why time remains physics' most poorly understood concept—and why our models may never capture its felt reality.
Using the Claude API in Python: A Developer's Guide
Using the Claude API in Python: A Developer's Guide
How developers are integrating Anthropic's Claude into Python apps—what the API can do, what it costs to learn, and what the tooling landscape looks like in 2026.
Joan of Arc's Army Examined in Invicta Documentary
Joan of Arc's Army Examined in Invicta Documentary
Invicta's new documentary on Joan of Arc's army bridges academic military history and YouTube storytelling. Harry Goodman examines what that translation costs and earns.
WoW Patch 12.1 Gearing Changes: Raiders Win, With Caveats
WoW Patch 12.1 Gearing Changes: Raiders Win, With Caveats
WoW patch 12.1 rebalances loot between raiders and Mythic+ players. Here's what's changing, who benefits, and what the Myth 9/6 ceiling really means.
Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey: Epic Ambition Meets Ancient Text
Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey: Epic Ambition Meets Ancient Text
Christopher Nolan adapts Homer's Odyssey with Matt Damon as Odysseus. Here's what the project signals about Hollywood ambition, classical storytelling, and the director's arc.
Apple Silicon vs IBM TM1: The EPM Market Disruption
Apple Silicon vs IBM TM1: The EPM Market Disruption
Dr. Ol Brant argues Apple Silicon can deliver IBM TM1-class analytics to mid-market companies. Here's what that claim actually means—and what it leaves open.
UBTech's Humanoid Robot Pushes Into Home and Border
UBTech's Humanoid Robot Pushes Into Home and Border
UBTech's UWorld U1 humanoid aims to replicate human faces, voices, and emotions. Here's what the launch actually shows — and what it quietly sidesteps.
Anthropic Engineers Have No Consensus on Claude Code
Anthropic Engineers Have No Consensus on Claude Code
Ray Amjad attended a Claude Code event in Tokyo and found Anthropic engineers running wildly different workflows. What that non-consensus actually means for developers.
Alibaba Bans Claude Code Over Alleged Backdoor Risks
Alibaba Bans Claude Code Over Alleged Backdoor Risks
Alibaba is banning Claude Code starting July 10, citing alleged backdoor tracking of Chinese users. Here's what developers need to know about the dispute.
Piracy Is Now the Only Game Preservation Plan
Piracy Is Now the Only Game Preservation Plan
Frank Cifaldi of the Video Game History Foundation says piracy is the only real game preservation method left. Sony's disc exit made the argument harder to ignore.
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Marry at Madison Square Garden
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Marry at Madison Square Garden
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce married at Madison Square Garden on July 3, 2026. Here's what the moment meant—and why the internet lost its entire mind.
Yakit vs Burp Suite: A Free Alternative Worth Knowing
Yakit vs Burp Suite: A Free Alternative Worth Knowing
Yakit is a free, open-source security platform challenging Burp Suite's $499/year dominance. Here's what it does well, where it falls short, and who should use it.
The Feynman Trick That Stumped a Math Competition
The Feynman Trick That Stumped a Math Competition
Richard Behiel's competition integral uses the Feynman trick to reach a surprisingly clean answer. Here's what the footage reveals about math, pressure, and access.
The Divine Feminine's Long Return in Western Religion
The Divine Feminine's Long Return in Western Religion
From Tiamat to the Shekhinah to the Virgin Mary, Dr. Justin Sledge traces the suppressed and resurgent divine feminine across millennia of Western religious history.
How to Make It Safer for People to Tell You Hard Truths
How to Make It Safer for People to Tell You Hard Truths
Chris Wheatley's TEDx talk reframes feedback as the receiver's responsibility—and offers a practical approach to making honest conversations actually happen.
Building an LLM Wiki from Karpathy's Blueprint
Building an LLM Wiki from Karpathy's Blueprint
Nate Herk demos an AI-powered personal wiki built on Karpathy's LLM knowledge base idea. Here's what the architecture reveals about how context shapes AI reasoning.
What Your Linux Distro Actually Says About You
What Your Linux Distro Actually Says About You
From Ubuntu to NixOS, your Linux distro choice reveals more than a technical preference—it maps an entire engineering philosophy and value system.
Neutrinos, Oscillation, and the Matter-Antimatter Mystery
Neutrinos, Oscillation, and the Matter-Antimatter Mystery
Particle physicist Kirsty Duffy explains neutrino oscillation, what it broke in the Standard Model, and why DUNE may finally answer why matter exists at all.
Why People Treat AI Chatbots as Divine Authorities
Why People Treat AI Chatbots as Divine Authorities
Anthropologist Webb Keane explains how chatbots acquire quasi-divine authority through language — and why the real beneficiaries are the corporations behind them.
Claude Fable 5 Access Is Changing: How to Use It Now
Claude Fable 5 Access Is Changing: How to Use It Now
Claude Fable 5's subscription access is ending soon. SEO consultant Julian Goldie outlines how to make the most of it before the window closes.