This French Yu-Gi-Oh fan built a 3D system that makes cards summon monsters in real life. He developed it in just 7 months and built chips capable of reading more than 3,600 cards.
BLACK AMERICANS WALKING DOWN OUR LINEAGE ON THIS LAND WHILE WATCHING FOREIGNERS TRY TO TELL US WHERE WE COME FROM BIH WE FROM THE LAND/ THE SOIL 🇺🇸🌎‼️🔥🔥🔥🎥
A 17-year-old just built a mind-controlled prosthetic arm for $300.
Yes, $300.
For something that usually costs $450,000.
Let that hit you.
A teenager, working from home, used AI, cheap materials, and 23,000 lines of code to build a device that reads brain signals without surgery, without implants, and without a $450K price tag.
This is not a feel-good story.
It’s a warning shot.
How can a high school student build something 1,500× cheaper than the industry standard?
What does that say about innovation?
About pricing?
About who gets access to life-changing technology?
Of course, medical prosthetics are expensive for real reasons:
materials, testing, regulation, customization.
But let’s be honest — not all of that justifies a half-million-dollar price.
This story exposes a simple truth:
The future of accessibility won’t come from the system.
It will come from the outsiders who dare to challenge it.
If a 17-year-old can match top-tier prosthetics for a fraction of the cost…
why aren’t these solutions available to the millions who need them?
What do you think — breakthrough moment or the start of a bigger revolution?
#AI #Innovation #Healthcare #Accessibility #FutureOfTech
🐎 Jordan Peele is reclaiming the West — centering the Black American cowboys who built it. The Oscar-winning filmmaker is teaming up with Tina Knowles and Bun B for High Horse: The Black Cowboy, a new Peacock documentary that challenges how America has erased Black cowboys from its Western legacy. Premiering Nov. 20, the film reclaims a narrative long whitewashed by Hollywood, revealing that nearly one in four cowboys during the frontier era was Black. Among the voices featured is journalist and cultural historian Michael Harriot, who helps unpack how Black riders and ranchers shaped the culture, music, and mythology of the West. As one voice in the film puts it, “If there were no Black cowboys, America wouldn’t exist.” Through interviews, archival footage, and never-before-seen stories, High Horse aims to restore the truth and celebrate a culture that has always been part of the American story — just not the one Hollywood told. 💬 Did you know that one in four cowboys in the Old West was Black? ✊🏾😎🇺🇸