Instagram decided to roll out a new “Muse AI” feature, that lets users create AI images based on people’s Instagram photos.
Then they opted in EVERYONE with a public account
To opt out:
Click your profile picture
3 bars in the top right
scroll down to "Sharing and reuse"
Toggle off for both Posts and for Reels
Every message has a hidden cost — paid before you type a single word.
We call it the Mental Drafting Toll.
Before a message, an email, or a document leaves your mind, you first draft it internally.
You organize your thoughts.
Find the right words.
Structure the message.
Rewrite it until it sounds right.
It happens every time you communicate.
And we've accepted it as "just thinking."
But it's not thinking.
Thinking is the fast, messy, creative part.
Mental drafting is the invisible work of making those thoughts presentable.
And traditional dictation never removed it.
Voice typing only freed your fingers.
You still had to draft it in your head first — then say it out loud.
That's the problem we set out to solve with Typeless 2.0.
For the first time, you can skip the mental draft — and just think out loud:
Speak in whatever order thoughts come.
Add context as it comes to you.
Change your mind halfway through.
Forget a name? Describe it — Typeless fills in the exact one.
It never makes things up.
Typeless doesn't just understand your words. It understands your thoughts before they become words — and turns them into clear writing.
You think it once.
Typeless writes what you meant.
Available today on Mac, Windows, iOS & Android.
Messy thoughts in. Clear writing out.
Dear @RaenestApp@RaenestHQ ,
I'm making this post because I genuinely believed your platform was one people could trust.
My brother, @FeranmiF95240, had about $9,700 in his account. He checked it on the morning of the 24th, and everything was still there. But when he logged in again around 12 a.m. on the 25th, his account had been deactivated and his funds were gone.
He has already submitted every document your team requested. Since then, he has sent emails, replied to your posts on X, and reached out through your DMs, but all he has received are automated responses. No real person has spoken to him or explained what happened to his account or his funds.
I recommended Raenest to people because I believed it was a trustworthy company. Seeing my own brother go through this is painful and disappointing.
Almost $10,000 is not a small amount of money. The least anyone deserves is a clear explanation from a real person, not silence and automated replies.
@RaenestApp, please review his case and provide a proper update. He has been patient, and it's time someone from your team addressed this directly.
Kindly retweet 🙏🏻@Victor_Webflow@Aje_Dynamicz@omoalhajaabiola@Hiecreate_
Some months ago, I blocked my girlfriend. I regret it. Sweet girl, ngl.
The blocking happened over something similar to this.
She texted me on WhatsApp around noon. First message of the day.
"Hey," she said.
I responded with a 2-minute-27-second voice note at some minutes past 3 p.m.
By some minutes past 8 p.m., there was still no reply.
So I called her on WhatsApp. The call was declined.
And I blocked her.
Ordinarily, I had no issue with her declining my call. She would often do that whenever she was on a call with her main guy. We had an understanding about that.
I blocked her because she had gone hours without responding to my message. That was the pattern. She had done it before. Leaving my messages unanswered for hours, or not replying at all until I called, only to give the silliest excuses imaginable.
I warned her about it. We had conversations about it. Nothing changed. At that point, that evening, I had had enough.
I always told her, "When you don't respond to my messages, I can't know whether we're good or whether you're even okay." She works and lives alone, so the possibility of an emergency never escapes my mind when she disappears like that.
Calling her that evening after five hours of silence, only for my call to be declined, confirmed to me that she was okay and that this was simply one of those days again.
So I blocked her everywhere and moved on with my life as the aspiring husband of two and father of two from one that iam.
But it turned out I was wrong.
She hadn't ignored my message, nor had she declined my call. Her phone had malfunctioned all day at work (a phone problem I already knew she had). Even that evening, when I called, she did not decline the call.
She reached me three days later with someone else's phone and explained everything.
Well, the deed had already been done.
I told her I wasn't an idiot. I wouldn't have blocked her merely for replying late once or for declining my call - a thing we both agreed she should do whenever she was already on a call with her man.
I blocked her because I believed I was witnessing the repetition of a pattern I had repeatedly complained about.
My reaction would never have been to block her if she had never created that pattern in the first place. If she had stopped replying hours late the very first time I expressed my displeasure, none of this would have happened.
And that brings me back to the anon.
That guy didn't block her because she slept at 8 p.m. There was most likely a pattern that made that conclusion believable enough for him to act on it.
Whether he communicated his displeasure the way I did with mine, I do not know.
But one thing I have learned is this:
Do not create a repulsive pattern.
We often do not react to one incident. We react to the accumulated weight of many.
And when a pattern has been established, even an innocent day can end up looking guilty.
Anthropic engineers just showed how they build a full app from scratch, using a loop of agents
40 minutes from the team behind Claude Code
they used three agents: one to plan, one to build, one to judge, cycling until the app actually works
the winners won't have the smartest model, they'll have the best loop
watch it, then read the full guide on how to actually use loops below
Bro I'm so sick of pretending this isn't weird.
The internet spent 20 years creating tutorials, open-source projects, blog posts & answers for free.
AI companies turned all of it into products worth billions.
And now the same people who created that knowledge are being told they're replaceable.
We built the library.
Someone else started charging admission.
Opay vs PalmPay
Listen:
OPay and PalmPay are the two giants Nigerians actually trust with their money, but they are not the same animal, and the math proves it.
Start with the flexible savings, the account you can touch anytime. On OPay, OWealth pays up to 15% per year, but only on your first N100,000, with daily interest. So N100,000 multiplied by 15%, then divided by 365 days, gives you roughly N41 a day. On PalmPay, the equivalent is Cashbox, and it pays a higher 16% per year on your balance, with no harsh cap at N100,000 the way OPay structures it. Run the same N100,000 through PalmPay’s 16% and you get about N44 a day. The gap looks small daily, but stretch it across a year and OPay gives you roughly N15,000 in interest on that N100,000, while PalmPay gives you about ₦16,000. PalmPay wins this round, narrowly.
Now look at what happens once your money grows past N100,000, because this is where the two apps actually separate. OPay drops your rate sharply once you cross that mark, paying a much lower percentage on the remainder. PalmPay, through Cashbox and its Spend and Save feature, keeps paying up to 20% without the same harsh cliff. So if you are someone moving real volume, not just N100,000 but N500,000 or more sitting in daily savings, PalmPay’s structure rewards you for staying, while OPay quietly punishes you for growing past its first tier.
Then there is the locked money, the part where patience is the whole game. OPay’s Fixed Savings pays up to 18% per year, and the formula is simple. Take your amount, multiply by the rate, multiply by the fraction of the year you locked it, then subtract 10% withholding tax from the interest only, never from your principal. Lock N400,000 for a full year at 18% and you walk away with about N64,800 after tax. PalmPay’s Fixed Term plan also reaches up to 20% per year. Run that same N400,000 through PalmPay’s higher rate and you get N80,000 before tax, which is roughly N15,000 more than OPay gives you for locking the exact same money for the exact same time.
So who actually wins. If your money rarely crosses N100,000 and you just want a clean, simple daily save, OPay still does the job, and its massive agent network means cashing out anywhere in Nigeria is rarely a problem. But if you are saving real money, the kind that grows past that first tier, or you are willing to lock funds for a fixed term to chase the highest possible return, PalmPay’s numbers are simply better right now, and the math does not lie about it.
Choose the app that pays you more for the size of money you actually carry, not the one your friends shout about the loudest.
Obama teared up during Michelle Obama's speech at Obama Presidential Center:
“You told me all those years ago that you couldn't promise me the world, but you could promise me an interesting life, & of course you outdid yourself & managed to give me both.”
Bro to Bro :
Make I cast one update.
If you want to collect your original Waec certificate from your school they will charge you 50k~ 90k but you fit get am for 5k ~ 8k
•Visit : Waec.)org
•Create an account
•Input your details
•Log in
•Just follow the prompts... It's simple to get. Just have like 8k and either your BVN, international passport or NIN.
• use Concord paper to Print it out
That’s your original Certificate, no cast am !!
As a kid, your undiagnosed ADHD made you "too much" - too loud, too forgetful, too emotional.
Probably you heard: "Lazy. Stupid. Not trying hard enough."
Now, a minor mistake at work or a partner's bored/tired face sends you spiraling, and you automatically people-please to avoid the rejection you expect.
The typical advice "just be yourself" backfires because you learned that your real self was unsafe. The mask feels like the only protection.
So what to do?