So literally every single one of these coins is related to dogs!?
https://t.co/AJMMM8NRgh
With the recent return to tradition and animal runners I think it only makes sense to run a DogCoin!
I will redirect fees to a dog charity
Today we're launching a brand new Video Editor and Recorder in the iOS app.
This includes some long-awaited features:
• Overlay captions in multiple languages and customize their look
• Green Screen—Add custom backgrounds using posts or photos from your camera roll
One of our biggest priorities is to give creators the tools to create original content & reward those creators.
We have plenty more updates coming to the video editor in the coming weeks.
This anthropic dev just posted how he convinced fable it's a rice grain and it's become a HUGE meme in the r/claude community,
Devs are already posting about how claude is obsessed with rice now and it talks about it 24/7
https://t.co/7ZZ9jLKedR
this could dead ass become the next goblin
“The American Dream” remains the intoxicating idea on which our national identity rests, capacious enough to rationalize every form of ambition, from the modest to the megalomaniacal. It describes the scholarship student who is the first in the family to attend college as well as the billionaire touting a self-made empire. It remains, too, a durable brand: the American Dream is the name of a racehorse, a mall in New Jersey, and a meme coin currently trading at $0.00002.
“Whether we still wholeheartedly believe in it is another question,” Hua Hsu writes. In 2024, the Pew Research Center reported that 47 per cent of Americans no longer trusted the American Dream’s promise of success through “hard work and determination.” Those who still held these beliefs skewed older and more conservative. Studies indicate that Gen Z’s hope is for a kind of bare-bones stability, for a debt-free life rather than one filled with riches. Hsu writes about the history and future of the phrase: https://t.co/7GllSAe7j2