🚨 BREAKING: Claude just made Coursera, Udemy and Skillshare optional.
Millions of people are canceling their subscriptions today.
Here are 08 FREE AI prompts that replace $50,000 worth of courses.
Universities won't teach you this.
We’re giving away $10,000,000 to founders building agent-first businesses.
Autonomous, proactive agents will run tomorrow's companies.
We're backing 500 founders building them.
The Founding 500.
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Meet Apple Creator Studio: giving creators of every kind easy access to powerful, intuitive tools for video, music, imaging, and productivity, all supercharged by intelligent features that speed up and elevate their work.
A promo for a decor studio that gets your space halloween ready.
Consistent characters, cinematic walkthroughs, and first–last frame magic powered by Veo 3.1 on invideo. Add your logo and your full video’s ready in minutes.
Rome wasn’t built in a day, but this explainer was. With first + last frame references using Veo 3.1 in invideo we created this immersive video with precise camera controls and continuity.
Prompt: The camera rockets up from below jagged Alpine cliffs in a rapid, continuous ascent, tilting down a few degrees more with every meter to reveal a thunderous gorge and glacier-fed river far beneath, until it snaps onto a lone figure braced on a knife-edge ridge, staring into the plunging valley.
Made with @Kling_ai 2.5 Turbo
Graphene just broke a fundamental law of physics.
Its electrons just did something physicists thought was impossible. For nearly 200 years, metals have obeyed the Wiedemann-Franz law – the rule that electrical conductivity and thermal conductivity always rise and fall together.
But in ultra-clean graphene, researchers at the Indian Institute of Science found the opposite. As electrical conductivity increased, thermal conductivity dropped, shattering a principle taught in every physics textbook.
The key lies at the “Dirac point,” a strange electronic tipping point where graphene is neither a metal nor an insulator. Here, electrons stop behaving like individual particles. Instead, they flow collectively as a nearly perfect fluid – a state called a “Dirac fluid.”
This discovery doesn’t just rewrite the rules for graphene. It provides a tabletop window into extreme physics usually reserved for black holes and high-energy colliders. Scientists say this behavior could help probe mysteries of quantum entanglement, black hole thermodynamics, and the very fabric of matter itself.
["Universality in quantum critical flow of charge and heat in ultraclean graphene." Nature Physics, 2025]
🚨 Breaking: Signals from Europa!
Scientists have detected powerful radio transmissions coming from Jupiter’s moon Europa—and they’re only getting stronger. The signals contain mathematical patterns and geometric sequences that don’t look natural. Even more stunning, they seem to respond to Earth’s own radio signals, almost like a distant conversation across space.
Breaking news like this could change everything we know about life beyond Earth. Do you think we are finally on the edge of discovering alien intelligence—or could there be another explanation.