I’ve often wondered how two animals, sometimes of completely different species, can somehow convey mutual affinity without even having mutual body language (much less similar bodies). I wonder how you might write two characters as best friends that can’t use words? (YouTube): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPdy3WxpNUg
Hmmm, the next link is a video, too. This is not planned.
“Spirited Man” Van Neistat (brother of Casey) has forbidden workshop practices. I feel a little called out. (YouTube shorts) #1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=30pVhb706I4 and #2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRF9Jv2belY
https://www.wikitok.io/ is TikTok but for browsing Wikipedia. Maybe a good way to get ideas?
Too bad it took an invasion to discover an ancient Greek burial site. https://archaeology.org/news/2025/03/31/ukrainian-soldiers-unearth-ancient-greek-burial/
Charlie Stross posts on the Fediverse an insight to the writing process (cheating): https://wandering.shop/@cstross/114245544857516024
While I’m still uncertain about the value of AI, I have spent time familiarizing myself with the tool and its capabilities. But it’s creating a new type of parasocial relationship: https://futurism.com/the-byte/chatgpt-dependence-addiction
Hmm, I didn’t expect another video link either. Seems like the content is steering in an unexpected direction. Videos can be engaging, but I wonder if they’re the best fit here. Do you think this changes the flow of the page? I’d love to know why this wasn’t planned—was it a last-minute addition or just a surprise? Also, are the videos complementing the text well enough? Curious to hear your thoughts!
I’m curious to know what AI tool is being used for these fake engagement posts?