No more racking your brains to find the 'perfect gift', or having stashes of unwanted gifts in the house.
Launching ** wishXlist **, currently hosted on @Railway.
Try it out!! https://t.co/0gupss5sFJ
LEGO just dropped its largest set ever: La Sagrada Familia.
It has 12,060 pieces and costs $800. The set comes 100 years after Antoni Gaudi’s death (June 10, 1926).
The details are insane including spires, carvings and interior with light shining through stain-glass windows.
Through meticulous finishing and hand decoration, the Tradition collection brings the mechanics of the watch to the forefront, revealing a contemporary interpretation of traditional craftsmanship.
Discover more: https://t.co/M0HFRPHAhv
#CraftingEmotions#OneInventionAtATime
For XPENG IRON, we developed a general-purpose framework that mimics human skeletal geometry and utilized a muscle-like lattice structure to replicate actual muscular movement.
In our new benchmark, MirrorCode, Claude Opus 4.6 autonomously reimplemented a 16,000-line bioinformatics toolkit — a task we believe would take a human engineer weeks.
A Chinese engineering student walked into his dorm with three boxes from Apple. Two Mac Studios. One Mac Mini. Set them up in a row. Stuck a label on each one: UI/UX. DEV. ADMIN. Two monitors behind them showing satellite maps of cities he's never been to.
His roommate watched the whole thing and said: You spent $4,000 to check the weather?
He smiled. Said nothing. Let him keep thinking that.
Then someone noticed what the three boxes were actually connected to.
A wallet. Making $106K. Betting on the temperature.
ColdMath. $106,875 profit. 5,623 predictions. Joined November 2025. Bio: Edge Compounds.
→ https://t.co/iJLnXKdlnh
Two Mac Studios and a Mac Mini doing one thing. Claude pulls live pilot weather data. METAR. TAF. Real sensors from real stations. Updated every 1-3 hours worldwide. Temperature accurate to a tenth of a degree. The DEV box compares it to prediction market prices. When they don't match the UI/UX screen flashes. The ADMIN box logs the trade.
Flash. Trade. Green.
$13 on Lucknow hitting 39C on March 7. Payout: $6,850. $11 on Ankara hitting 4C on February 23. Payout: $5,752.
Eleven dollar bets returning five thousand. On the temperature in a city most people can't find on a map.
A friend who flies commercial told him pilots get atmospheric data hours before any public forecast. This data is free. Aviation safety requires it. Nobody outside of aviation even looks at it.
He looked. Pointed Claude at the feeds. Said: find me every city where the real temperature doesn't match the price.
Claude found dozens. Every single day. Tokyo. Chicago. Wellington. Atlanta. Ankara. Lucknow. Cities on six continents. All with weather stations publishing data that nobody in the markets is reading.
The three boxes run 24/7. Even when he's in class. Even when he's asleep. The satellite maps keep updating. The DEV box keeps comparing. The screen keeps flashing.
His roommate finally asked what the setup actually does. The student showed him the balance. The roommate didn't say anything. Just asked for a third monitor.
34K people watching. $89K still loaded in active positions. Two Mac Studios. One Mac Mini. Two screens. One quiet kid who realized the most predictable thing on Earth is the thing everyone ignores.
The weather.