Steen: He doesn't care which side he plays on. He doesn't understand this that ISTORA is difficult to play with. He's never lost a match in here, Victor Lai.
Gill: Well, it is his first 🤣
Sebab tu la muka menang pn muka mcm tuu 😘
the engineer who built Claude Code just dropped a 28-minute video on how to write prompts that actually work
I've seen $300 courses that don't cover what he shows in the first 10 minutes
CLAUDE.md files, memory shortcuts, parallel sessions, prompting patterns
all in one video and completely free
works whether you're a developer, a beginner, or someone who's been using Claude for months
based on this, I put together 18 things you can copy and use in Claude today
full guide in the article below
Peringkat Kumpulan #TUC2026
Thomas Cup | Pusingan Ketiga
MALAYSIA 🇲🇾 🆚 🇯🇵 JEPUN
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0️⃣2️⃣ Gandingan 'scratch pair' diturunkan:
▶️ Aaron Chia-Tee Kai Wun
▶️ Nur Izzuddin-Soh Wooi Yik
Selamat berjuang wira negara 💪🇲🇾
📸 Zongyenyen
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#UNBRKBL
#ShuttleHard
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There's a physicist at Stanford named Safi Bahcall who modeled this exact principle and the math is wild.
He calls it "phase transitions in human networks." When you're stationary, your probability of a lucky event is limited to your existing surface area: the people you already know, the places you already go, the ideas you've already been exposed to. Your opportunity window is fixed.
When you move, your collision rate with new nodes in a network increases nonlinearly. Double your movement (new conversations, new cities, new projects) and your probability of a serendipitous encounter doesn't double. It roughly quadruples. Because each new node connects you to their entire network, not just to them.
Richard Wiseman ran a 10-year study at the University of Hertfordshire tracking self-described "lucky" and "unlucky" people. The single biggest differentiator wasn't IQ, education, or family money. Lucky people scored significantly higher on one trait: openness to experience. They talked to strangers more, varied their routines more, and said yes to invitations at nearly twice the rate.
The "unlucky" group followed the same routes, ate at the same restaurants, and talked to the same 5 people. Their networks were closed loops. No new inputs, no new collisions.
Luck isn't random. Luck is surface area. And surface area is a function of movement.
The lobster emoji is doing more work than most people realize. Lobsters grow by shedding their shell when it gets too tight. The growth requires a period of total vulnerability. No protection, no armor, soft body exposed to the ocean.
That's the cost of movement nobody posts about. You have to be uncomfortable first. The new shell only hardens after you've already moved.
This week is a gift.
As you fast your 6 of Shawwal, you can combine with the Sunnahs of fasting Monday and the middle days of the month Wednesday–Friday (13-15). Thursday alone can carry three intentions.
Multiple intentions. One effort.
Maximum reward. A Most Merciful Lord.
And pray for your Ummah every day as you break your fast.
Someone said that
"the regret you feel at the end of Ramadan for not making the most out of it might be a reflection of the regret you will feel in your grave when you realise you could've done more in your life."
It reminds us of the ayah that goes
"My Lord send me back"
This is wild.
143 million people thought they were catching Pokémon. They were actually building one of the largest real-world visual datasets in AI history.
Niantic just disclosed that photos and AR scans collected through Pokémon Go have produced a dataset of over 30 billion real-world images. The company is now using that data to power visual navigation AI for delivery robots.
Players didn't just walk around with their phones. They scanned landmarks, storefronts, parks, and sidewalks from every angle, at every time of day, in lighting and weather conditions that staged photography would never capture. They documented the physical world at a scale no mapping company with a fleet of vehicles could have replicated on the same timeline or budget.
Niantic collected this systematically, data point by data point, across eight years, while users thought the only thing at stake was catching a rare Charizard.
The most valuable AI training datasets in the world aren't being assembled in data centers. They're being built by people who have no idea they're building them.
Today @GoogleMaps is getting its biggest upgrade in over a decade. By combining our Gemini models with a deep understanding of the world, Maps now unlocks entirely new possibilities for how you navigate and explore. Here’s what you need to know 🧵
Because the first time you do it, you feel it in your body. You walk toward the venue and your hands feel slightly empty. You keep checking your phone even though nobody’s coming. You stand in line and suddenly you’re hyper aware of where to put your eyes. You’re scanning faces like you’re looking for someone to rescue you from looking like a person with no friends.
The brain does this stupid thing where it equates being alone with being unwanted.
Even when you chose it.
Even when you have people.
Even when the truth is just: your schedules don’t match, nobody answered in time, you don’t want to beg someone to live your life with you.
Still, the body feels it as exposure.
That’s why so many people would rather stay home.
They don’t want to miss the movie. They want to avoid the feeling of being visibly alone in public. They want to avoid that tiny sting when you sit down and there’s an empty seat next to you and you can feel other people’s laughter and you wonder if you look sad.
It’s pride. It’s fear. It’s that childhood wiring that says the herd equals safety.
Then you stay home and you scroll a feed of other people living.
You see couples at concerts. Friends clinking glasses. Someone posting museum photos. Someone at a cafe with a book and a cute pastry. You tell yourself they’re having a better life than you.
But half the time they’re just doing what you could have done, if you weren’t waiting for permission from someone else’s calendar.
Waiting is the quiet killer.
Not because friends are bad. Friends are great. Love is great. Shared memories are real.
The problem is when your entire life becomes contingent on other people’s availability.
You turn into this person who is always “down” but never actually doing. Always “we should.” Always “soon.” Always “when everyone is free.” You start stockpiling intentions like they’re experiences.
A year goes by that way so fast it makes you nauseous.
A lot of people don’t realize how much they’ve outsourced their living until they hit a wall.
They break up. Their best friend moves. Everyone gets busy. Someone has kids. Someone gets depressed. Someone becomes a work zombie. Suddenly the social engine that carried you stops. And you’re left standing there like a person who forgot how to walk without holding someone’s hand.
That’s when “go alone” stops sounding like empowerment and starts sounding like survival.
There’s a specific sadness in realizing you’ve been sitting in your apartment waiting for other people to press play on your life.
Like you’re paused until someone else is ready.
learn to go alone.
Not because it makes you edgy.
Because it keeps you from turning your life into a waiting room.
Going alone teaches you something your nervous system needs to learn: solitude is not rejection.
You walk into the coffee shop alone and nobody cares. The barista does not care. The couple at the corner table does not care. The guy on his laptop does not care. Most people are so wrapped up in themselves that your aloneness is invisible.
That’s the first relief.
The second relief is quieter: you start noticing what you actually like.
When you go with friends, you’re in group mode. Compromise mode. Conversation mode. Social performance mode.
Alone, you’re in attention mode.
You notice the light in the museum hitting the floor. You notice you want to stay five minutes longer in front of one painting. You notice which songs hit harder when you’re not trying to look cool about it. You notice you like sitting by the window. You notice you prefer earlier showtimes. You notice you like walking slowly after the movie instead of immediately debriefing it.
You start developing taste that isn’t filtered through anyone else.
That’s a form of adulthood people skip.
Also, going alone is a kind of quiet rebellion against shame.
HE DIES😭
Because of this broken piece, my father woke up struggling to breathe—he was choking and nearly died His condition deteriorated rapidly, and he is now in the hospital needing an inhaler
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