• WWW.YOUTUBE.COM
    O3 & O4 mini إستعراض شامل لقدرات
    O3 & O4 mini إستعراض شامل لقدرات
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  • WWW.YOUTUBE.COM
    مين أقوى وكيل ذكاء اصطناعي في 2025؟ والمفاجأة إن الأداء العملي صدمنا!
    مين أقوى وكيل ذكاء اصطناعي في 2025؟ والمفاجأة إن الأداء العملي صدمنا!
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  • GAMERANT.COM
    Isekai Anime With The Most Selfless Protagonists
    Isekai anime often lures viewers in with promises of epic battles, fantastical worlds, and powerful protagonists who can conquer any challenge. But while the genre thrives on escapism, some series stand out for depicting protagonists who aren’t driven by revenge or personal glory. Instead, they’re fueled by something far more compelling: selflessness. Whether it's risking their lives for strangers or sacrificing everything to protect their loved ones, these characters embody true heroism, not just in their actions but in their relentless commitment to others.
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  • WWW.POLYGON.COM
    Marvel Rivals data-miners dig up secrets for the love of the game
    Marvel Rivals is doomed to forever be compared to Overwatch. It’s a team-based shooter with heroes, and some of those heroes happen to have a lot in common with the ones in Overwatch. NetEase has never directly said Blizzard’s game was an inspiration, but a now-removed line in Marvel Rivals’ code confirms that someone on the development team knew exactly what kind of game they were making. That line described a hero in Chinese as a “Soldier: 76 replica”, which is a direct reference to the Overwatch character. Nobody was meant to see it, but thanks to a group of Marvel Rivals data miners, we know someone put it there before it was patched out. “[NetEase] erased it in newer builds but it’s still stuck in my head since Marvel Rivals is the ‘Overwatch clone’ for many people,” Visceral, one of the data miners, told Polygon via DMs. “Was pretty silly when I stumbled across it.” Visceral is part of the group who runs X0XLEAKS on X, a popular account that regularly posts upcoming skins and heroes found within the game’s code — often before NetEase officially announces them. Whenever a new update comes out, the team dives into it using custom tools to see what’s been added. Closer look at the Retro X-Men Skin for Psylocke: pic.twitter.com/M2pKyqZWQW— X0XLEAK (@X0X_LEAK) April 5, 2025 Those tools let them see all the things the developers hide in the game’s files, like character models, maps, textures, and lines of text. “Just clicking through your game folder won’t give you anything,” Visceral said. “So you either need custom/self-made extraction scripts or third party software to access the actual game assets.” And then you need to know what to look for. X0XLEAKS has evidence that hints at several unannounced heroes coming to Marvel Rivals, including Blade, Daredevil, Phoenix, and Professor X. Sometimes these are just names written out in the code, but sometimes they’re full lists of abilities, team-ups, and voice lines. Even so, nothing they’ve found is real until NetEase says it is. Marvel Rivals executive producer Danny Koo said in an IGN story about data miners earlier this year that heroes go through a lot of iteration before they’re released. “So there could be some information left in the code, and it might mean that we have tried those directions and they may appear or may not appear in our future plans,” Koo said. Koo doesn’t recommend messing with the game’s files, but also doesn’t seem particularly bothered by data miners sticking their hands in them anyway. Like with any live service game, it’s going to happen whether you want it to or not. We contacted NetEase about the Soldier: 76 find and data-mining and will update this post when we hear back. “Honestly, I think data-mining is a net-positive for the game,” Stella, another member of X0XLEAKS, told Polygon. “In reality it keeps people excited and engaged with what’s coming up, you’ll find people logging in again when they usually wouldn’t to check out some new piece of content that maybe the developers didn’t spotlight. I know especially for some of Hoyoverse’s games, you get people especially excited to go out and farm new materials they might need for upcoming characters before they come out.” New Map: ArakkoAs we leaked before, Arakko is its own Map and could Arrive in Season 2.5There are links to Emma Frosts Hellfire Gala on Arakko and it’s referenced in these new Lore entries. „..X-Tron resumes the assault on Krakoa, ultimately seizing Cerebro before departing… pic.twitter.com/mXxUbFWPCo— X0XLEAK (@X0X_LEAK) April 5, 2025 Anyone can learn to data-mine with free tools online, Visceral said, but it takes some skill to verify the juiciest details. When they found a mention of Daredevil in the files, they didn’t post about it until they were sure it was legit. “We took our time and made sure it was the right hero, translated the same sentence with 10 different translators online, compared official Chinese writings of the hero in question, let multiple independent native speakers translate the Chinese text to make sure its 100% the right hero and it ended up being Daredevil,” they said. “There are also things we don’t talk about on X like every single hero so far having voice lines for not being able to get healed (like anti-healing from Overwatch), there are no indications AFAIK of any single hero now or in the future being able to do something like that,” X0XLEAKS’ Matfacio told Polygon. Despite having over 45,000 followers on X, X0XLEAKS doesn’t get paid for any of this. They do it because they love the game and want to share what they find with other fans. “I enjoy seeing how the developers are implementing new features, the design decisions that go into it, and how I can use some of the information in the game to help players out,” Stella said. “I find digging into how these games are constructed to be the most fun part, it’s a big problem solving puzzle to me.” “I think to really do solid reporting on something you have to be passionate about it otherwise it becomes a chore,” Stella said. “We wouldn’t be leaking games we’re not passionate about. NetEase has done a great job making a fun shake-up to the scene.”
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  • WWW.ENGADGET.COM
    Nintendo shares a vintage SNES commercial starring Paul Rudd as he reprises the role for Switch 2
    Nintendo surprised us with a little blast from the past this weekend, uploading a 34-year-old Super Nintendo commercial featuring Paul Rudd to its YouTube channel — and it’s released a sequel for the Nintendo Switch 2. Rudd appears in the Switch 2 promo wearing the same outfit he wore back in 1991, but this time he’s playing Mario Kart World with some celebrity friends over the new GameChat social feature. It’s a charming callback to the original SNES ad, which itself is deliciously ‘90s and a real treat to revisit in 2025. Commercials today just don’t hit the same. Nintendo has steadily been drumming up the hype for the Switch 2’s arrival since it was announced at the beginning of April. The company recently held a livestream to share a more in-depth look at Mario Kart World, which launches on the same day as the new console, revealing some of the new courses, items and assistive features like Smart Steering. We’ve still got some time to wait before it’s all here, though. Pre-orders for the Switch 2 open on April 24, and the console will be available starting June 5. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/nintendo/nintendo-shares-a-vintage-snes-commercial-starring-paul-rudd-as-he-reprises-the-role-for-switch-2-171316112.html?src=rss
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  • WWW.TECHRADAR.COM
    $25 software kits to steal your personal details are freely on sale on dark web — here's how to remain safe
    Cheap phishing-as-a-service kits drive a surge in hacking, identity theft, and easy online scams.
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  • WWW.FASTCOMPANY.COM
    Why using shorthand like ‘thx’ and ‘k’ in texting is hurting your relationships
    My brother’s text messages can read like fragments of an ancient code: “hru,” “wyd,” “plz”—truncated, cryptic, and never quite satisfying to receive. I’ll often find myself second-guessing whether “gr8” means actual excitement or whether it’s a perfunctory nod. This oddity has nagged at me for years, so I eventually embarked upon a series of studies with fellow researchers Sam Maglio and Yiran Zhang. I wanted to know whether these clipped missives might undermine genuine dialogue, exploring the unspoken signals behind digital shorthand. As we gathered data, surveyed people and set up experiments, it became clear that those tiny shortcuts—sometimes hailed as a hallmark of efficient communication—undermine relationships instead of simplifying them. Short words lead to feeling shortchanged Most people type “ty” and “brb” (for “thank you” and “be right back”) without batting an eye. In a survey we conducted of 150 American texters ages 18 to 65, 90.1% reported regularly using abbreviations in their daily messages, and 84.2% believed these shortcuts had either a positive effect or no meaningful impact on how the messages were perceived by the recipients. But our findings suggest that the mere inclusion of abbreviations, although seemingly benign, start feeling like a brush-off. In other words, whenever a texter chops words down to their bare consonants, recipients sense a lack of effort, which causes them to disengage. It’s a subtle but pervasive phenomenon that most people don’t intuit. We started with controlled lab tests, presenting 1,170 participants ages 15 to 80 with one of two near-identical text exchanges: one set sprinkled with abbreviations, the other fully spelled out. In every single scenario, participants rated the abbreviating sender as less sincere and far less worthy of a reply. The deeper we dug, the more consistent the pattern became. Whether people were reading messages about weekend plans or major life events, the presence of truncated words and phrases such as “plz,” “sry,” or “idk” for “please,” “sorry,” or “I don’t know” made the recipients feel shortchanged. The phenomenon didn’t stop with strangers. In more experiments, we tested whether closeness changed the dynamic. If you’re texting a dear friend or a romantic partner, can you abbreviate to your heart’s content? Evidently not. Even people imagining themselves chatting with a longtime buddy reported feeling a little put off by half-spelled words, and that sense of disappointment chipped away at how authentic the interaction felt. From Discord to dating apps Still, we had nagging doubts: Might this just be some artificial lab effect? We wondered whether real people on real platforms might behave differently. So we took our questions to Discord, a vibrant online social community where people chat about everything from anime to politics. More importantly, Discord is filled with younger people who use abbreviations like it’s second nature. We messaged random users asking them to recommend TV shows to watch. One set of messages fully spelled out our inquiry; the other set was filled with abbreviations. True to our lab results, fewer people responded to the abbreviated ask. Even among digital natives—youthful, tech-savvy users who are well versed in the casual parlance of text messaging—a text plastered with shortcuts still felt undercooked. If a few missing letters can sour casual chats, what happens when love enters the equation? After all, texting has become a cornerstone of modern romance, from coy flirtations to soul-baring confessions. Could “plz call me” inadvertently jeopardize a budding connection? Or does “u up?” hint at more apathy than affection? These questions guided our next foray, as we set out to discover whether the swift efficiency of abbreviations might actually short-circuit the delicate dance of courtship and intimacy. Our leap into the realm of romance culminated on Valentine’s Day with an online speed dating experiment. We paired participants for timed “dates” inside a private messaging portal, and offered half of them small incentives to pepper their replies with abbreviations such as “ty” instead of “thank you.” When it came time to exchange contact information, the daters receiving abbreviation-heavy notes were notably more reluctant, citing a lack of effort from the other party. Perhaps the most eye-opening evidence came from a separate study running a deep analysis of hundreds of thousands of Tinder conversations. The data showed that messages stuffed with abbreviations such as “u” and “rly” scored fewer overall responses and short-circuited conversations. It’s the thought that counts We want to be clear: We’re not campaigning to ban “lol.” Our research suggests that a few scattered abbreviations don’t necessarily torpedo a friendship. Nor does every one of the many messages sent to many people every day warrant the full spelling-out treatment. Don’t care about coming across as sincere? Don’t need the recipient to respond? Then by all means, abbreviate away. Instead, it’s the overall reliance on condensed phrases that consistently lowers our impression of the sender’s sincerity. When we type “plz” a dozen times in a conversation, we risk broadcasting that the other person isn’t worth the extra letters. The effect may be subtle in a single exchange. But over time, it accumulates. If your ultimate goal is to nurture a deeper connection, be it with a friend, a sibling, or a prospective date, taking an extra second to type “thanks” might be a wise investment. Abbreviations began as a clever workaround for clunky flip phones, with its keypad texting (recall tapping “5” three times to type the letter “L”) and strict monthly character limits. Yet here we are, long past those days, still trafficking in “omg” and “brb,” as though necessity never ended. After all of those studies, I’ve circled back to my brother’s texts with fresh eyes. I’ve since shared with him our findings about how those tiny shortcuts can come across as half-hearted or indifferent. He still fires off “brb” in half his texts, and I’ll probably never see him type “I’m sorry” in full. But something’s shifting: He typed “thank you” a few times, even threw in a surprisingly heartfelt “hope you’re well” the other day. It’s a modest shift, but maybe that’s the point. Sometimes, just a few more letters can let someone know they really matter. David Fang is a PhD student in marketing at Stanford University. Sam Maglio, an associate professor of marketing and psychology at the University of Toronto, contributed to the writing of this article. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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  • WWW.WIRED.COM
    Scientists Are Mapping the Bizarre, Chaotic Spacetime Inside Black Holes
    By understanding the churning region near singularities, physicists hope they might be able to reconcile gravity and quantum mechanics.
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  • GAMINGBOLT.COM
    Assassin’s Creed Shadows Rated for Nintendo Switch 2 by PEGI
    Ubisoft’s Star Wars Outlaws has a release date for Nintendo Switch 2, but it seems the company has other titles coming to the platform in the near future. Assassin’s Creed Shadows, released last month for Xbox Series X/S, PS5, and PC, was recently rated by PEGI in Europe for the platform, as spotted by Gematsu. However, this is only viewable under the “Most Searched Games” tab. The actual listing doesn’t list the Nintendo Switch 2. Whether this is an error or the changes have yet to reflect on the page itself, it makes sense for Ubisoft to bring the open-world action RPG to more platforms. After all, it crossed three million players just over a week after launching, recorded the second-highest day-one sales revenue for the franchise, and topped US sales charts for its first three weeks. How it will perform on Switch 2 remains to be seen, so stay tuned and check out our review in the meantime.
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