SIGNS OF WHAT YOUR BODY IS STARVING FOR
- Cold hands : Iron
- No appetite : Zinc
- Dry eyes : Vitamin A
- Short of breath : Iron
- Hair falling out : Iron
- Dry mouth : Vitamin A
- Brittle nails : Biotin (B7)
- Tired all day : Vitamin D
- Feeling low : Vitamin B6
- Forgetfulness : Omega 3
- Leg cramps : Magnesium
- Brain fog : Vitamin B12
- Muscle weakness : Potassium
- Tingling or numbness : Vitamin B6
- Poor sleep quality : Magnesium
Fix it before it gets worse.
ANDROID USERS, READ THIS!
Your phone says "Storage Full."
So you delete photos. Delete videos. Uninstall apps. Yet the storage barely moves.
That's because the real culprits aren't your photos or apps. it's the hidden junk Android quietly stores in the background
Here's how I cleaned my phone yesterday and recovered 35GB without deleting a single photo, video, app, or chat I actually use.
Here's exactly how I did it:
👇🏼👇🏼
A YouTuber with 110 million subscribers released a free version of ChatGPT.
His name is Felix Kjellberg. You know him as PewDiePie.
He spent his own money on a 10-GPU computer at home. He used it to run the same kind of AI models that power ChatGPT, but on his own hardware. Then he wrote his own app to chat with them, because the apps that already exist were not good enough.
Then he gave it away for free. Anyone can download it. Anyone can change it. Anyone can run it.
It's called Odysseus.
It runs on your computer. Your data stays on your disk. No account. No tracking. No monthly fee.
What you get:
- A chat window like ChatGPT
- An AI assistant that can browse the web, read your files, and do tasks for you
- A tool that scans your computer and tells you which AI models will work on it
- A research mode that reads many websites and writes you a report
- A side-by-side mode to test two AI models on the same question
- A writing editor where AI helps you, instead of writing for you
- Memory, so the AI remembers your past chats
- Email with AI that sorts your inbox and writes replies for you
- Notes, a to-do list, and a calendar
- Works on your phone too
23,612 stars on GitHub in 2 days. Top of trending all weekend.
ChatGPT Plus costs $20 a month. Claude Pro costs $20 a month. PewDiePie's version costs nothing, runs on your own computer, and the code is open for anyone to read.
This is what AI looked like before the subscription model.
(Link in the comments)
You can now turn any technical book or document into a Claude Code skill 🤯
Dumping the raw PDF into Claude costs ~200K tokens before you ask a single question. book-to-skill compiles the book once, then loads only the chapter you need.
→ Per-chapter summaries pulled from the source
→ Glossary + cheatsheet of named frameworks
→ Docling keeps tables, formulas, and code as markdown
100% Open Source.
Two Argentinian friends killed the entire game engine industry.
It's called Godot. You build full 2D and 3D games for free, ship them anywhere, and keep 100% of every dollar you ever make.
Here's how it works.
Godot is the engine. Clean editor. Runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux. You install it once and it does everything Unity and Unreal do without a single fee attached.
The whole thing is built on a node and scene system. Every part of your game is a node. You stack them, nest them, reuse them. One mental model for the entire engine instead of fighting twelve different systems.
→ No license fee
→ No royalty on your revenue
→ No per-install charge
→ Exports to desktop, mobile, web, and consoles
→ GDScript, C#, and C++ all supported
Unity cannot claw back a cut of your game. There is no contract. No revenue threshold. No surprise invoice when you blow up.
The entire game engine industry is built on one assumption. That you will hand over a slice of everything you earn rather than use the free thing that already does the job.
That assumption died in Buenos Aires.
111k stars. MIT License. 100% Opensource.
https://t.co/H14pJrH3VT
https://t.co/MBp3L0XNcB
Singapore recently made it a CRIME to refuse a vaccination.
Coincidentally, the law was passed right after Bill Gates and Klaus Schwab paid Singapore a visit.
Nutrients don’t work alone. 🌿
Turmeric without black pepper is useless. Spinach without fat won't absorb. Iron without vitamin C doesn't work. Calcium blocks iron absorption. Magnesium needs to be taken at night. Vitamin D needs K2 or it calcifies your arteries.
This is why nutrition is not random.
Supplement with intention — or you may simply waste your money.
A 22-year-old graduate student in Kazakhstan got so angry at journal paywalls in 2011 that she built a pirate website holding 88 million scientific papers, and last month she turned the whole thing into an AI that lets you ask one question and get the actual research as the answer.
Her name is Alexandra Elbakyan, and the website is called Sci-Hub.
The AI she just launched is called Sci-Bot. It lives at https://t.co/6w0IBtOEYB and almost nobody outside academia knows it exists yet.
Here is the story, because it is one of the strangest things to happen in science publishing in the last 50 years.
Elbakyan was born in Almaty in 1988, the year the Soviet Union started to collapse. She taught herself programming at 12. She read Soviet science books that explained things her family used to call miracles. She got into computer security at university and graduated in 2009 with a degree she barely needed because by then she was already a serious hacker.
Alexandra moved to Moscow that fall. Then Germany. Then a research internship in the United States. She was working on brain-computer interfaces, the kind of research that requires you to read hundreds of papers a year just to keep up with the field.
And every single one of those papers was locked behind a journal paywall that cost between 30 and 50 dollars to read once.
She did the math. A graduate student in Kazakhstan could not afford to read science.
The first thing she did was learn how to get around the paywalls one paper at a time. She passed the trick around to other students. They asked her for papers constantly. She got tired of doing it manually.
So in September 2011, in three days, she wrote a script that automated the whole thing. A user pastes a DOI. The script logs in through a donated institutional credential. The paper comes back free. The website caches it.
The next person who asks for that paper gets it instantly because the previous request already saved a copy.
That was Sci-Hub. Three days of code. One graduate student. Done.
15 years later, the cache holds 88 million scientific papers. Almost every piece of scholarly literature published before 2020 is sitting on her servers. Researchers in 190 countries use it. Studies in Nature have shown that roughly half of all academic paper downloads worldwide now go through Sci-Hub, not the publishers who actually own the copyrights.
Elsevier sued her in 2015 and won a 15 million dollar judgment. She did not pay. The American Chemical Society sued her and won an injunction. She did not comply. Courts in India, France, Russia, and the UK have tried to block the domain. She just moves it. https://t.co/3sAWJzNe8I. https://t.co/tGIETesZ8i. https://t.co/H5WQ1f9lqR. The site has had over 20 domains and is still up.
Nature put her on its list of the 10 people who mattered most to science in 2016. The New York Times compared her to Edward Snowden. The Verge called her the pirate queen of science.
She has not been to the United States in over a decade because she would be arrested at the airport.
The Sci-Bot launch in April 2026 is the part that nobody is talking about.
She took the 88 million paper database and put a small language model on top of it. You ask a question in plain English. The model searches the entire shadow library, pulls the relevant papers, synthesizes an answer grounded in real citations, and links you to the full text of every source. Free. No login. No institutional credential. No paywall.
Three real scientists tested it for a Chemical and Engineering News article last month. They asked it medical and chemistry questions. The radiologist said the answer he got was usable. The chemist said the gaps in recent literature were obvious but the older science was solid. The publisher community is furious.
What she built is what the paid academic AI tools are trying to build. Except the paid ones are limited to what their parent publisher legally owns. Hers is limited to almost nothing.
Alexandra still lives somewhere in Russia. She does not give her address. She does not do video interviews. She gives talks over Skype with the camera off. She runs the largest illegal library in human history from a laptop and a donation page.
A graduate student who could not afford to read science built the system the entire scientific community now quietly depends on.
The publishers have spent a decade trying to shut her down.
She just shipped an AI that makes their entire business model outdated.
Supertonic just killed ElevenLabs.
A text-to-speech model that runs entirely on your device. No cloud. No API key. No per-character pricing.
2,700 GitHub stars. 100% open source. MIT licensed.
The numbers are wild:
→ 167x faster than real-time on an M4 Pro
→ Only 66M parameters
→ 1,263 chars/sec vs ElevenLabs Flash at 287
→ 1,048 chars/sec vs OpenAI TTS-1 at 55
→ Runs on a Raspberry Pi. Runs on an e-reader in airplane mode.
Reads currency, dates, phone numbers, and technical units correctly without preprocessing. ElevenLabs fails these. OpenAI fails these. Gemini fails these.
Supports 11 platforms and 5 languages. Chrome extension turns any webpage into audio in under a second.
I've watched on-device models lose to cloud APIs for years. This one doesn't lose.
The cloud TTS business just got cooked.
Here’s Dr Zelenko teaching us how to treat Hantavirus back in 2022. This will be the most enlightening 2 minutes and 47 seconds of your life. Please listen carefully.