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Take a First Look at INVINCIBLE x ASICS' GEL-NIMBUS 10.1  'HTTP 404'

Take a First Look at INVINCIBLE x ASICS' GEL-NIMBUS 10.1 'HTTP 404'

Hypebeast19 hours ago

Name:INVINCIBLE x ASICS GEL-NIMBUS 10.1 'HTTP 404'Colorway:'HTTP 404'SKU:TBCMSRP:TBCRelease Date:2025Where to Buy:INVINCIBLE,ASICS
Taiwanese streetwear imprintINVINCIBLEteams up once again withASICSfor a striking new take on theGEL-NIMBUS 10.1, dubbed 'HTTP 404.' First teased byShawn Yuevia his Instagram stories, the collaboration channels the chaos of internet error culture, transforming the familiar 'Page Not Found' message into a creative design concept.
The sneakers adopt a fragmented, deconstructed aesthetic that mimics digital glitches and system malfunctions. The upper combines diamond-pattern mesh with synthetic overlays in white, black,and metallic silver, brought to life with sharp blue accents. INVINCIBLE's logo appears on the toebox, while the iconic ASICS Tiger Stripe is partially peeled away, subtly revealing the inner layers and construction beneath.

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SoftBank pitches chip giant TSMC on building $1 trillion AI hub in US: report
SoftBank pitches chip giant TSMC on building $1 trillion AI hub in US: report

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

SoftBank pitches chip giant TSMC on building $1 trillion AI hub in US: report

SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son is pitching Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company on a massive $1 trillion complex in the US to build robots and artificial intelligence, according to a report. The giant robotics center would be based in Arizona, a version of the production hub seen in the Chinese city of Shenzhen that could help bring manufacturing back to the US, sources told Bloomberg. It comes as President Trump has been calling for an all-hands approach to bringing manufacturing opportunities to the US, especially by tech companies and automakers. 3 SoftBank's CEO Masayoshi Son speaking during a White House event as President Trump looks on. KEN CEDENO/POOL/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock Son is seeking out TSMC invest $165 billion in the US and has opened its first Arizona factory – as a partner, according to the report. It's unclear what role Son sees for the Taiwanese chip giant, which makes Nvidia's most advanced chips, and if the company would even be interested in the project. TSMC declined to comment. Codenamed 'Project Crystal Land,' the complex is a clear attempt not only to advance artificial intelligence but to ensure a lasting legacy for Son, who has often talked down his past accomplishments and abandoned projects midway, sources told Bloomberg. The ambitious, one-of-a-kind facility would require support from the Trump administration. SoftBank officials have spoken with federal and state officials, including Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, to discuss possible tax breaks for firms building factories or investing in the complex, sources told Bloomberg. Son is also speaking with major tech companies as possible investors, like South Korea's Samsung. SoftBank, Samsung and the White House did not immediately respond to The Post's requests for comment. 3 Masayoshi Son is reportedly seeking out TSMC as a partner in the Arizona project. REUTERS Son's company has invested heavily in ChatGPT maker OpenAI, recently leading a $40 billion funding round for the Sam Altman-led firm as the two seek to raise hundreds of billions of dollars to fund large data centers in the US. These data centers are crucial to the artificial intelligence industry, which requires vast amounts of power and large storage capabilities. SoftBank's campaigning process for the Arizona complex could signal that its money-raising efforts alongside OpenAI are proceeding at a slower pace than they had anticipated, according to the report. Son has created a list of companies that might take part in the Arizona manufacturing hub, like automation company Agile Robots SE, sources said. 3 President Trump has said he wants to bring manufacturing opportunities back to the US. AP Meanwhile, SoftBank is exploring project financing options for Stargate, its $500 billion initiative to build data centers in the US with OpenAI and Oracle. This financing method could allow SoftBank to raise funding on a project-by-project basis, which is easier than gathering a large sum of money upfront. The same process could potentially be used for Project Crystal Land, according to the Bloomberg report. These plans are still preliminary and could change, sources told the news outlet.

Robert Kirkman Breaks Down INVIBCIBLE Season 3, Why Mark's Future Should Scare You, and Lessons Learned from THE WALKING DEAD — GeekTyrant
Robert Kirkman Breaks Down INVIBCIBLE Season 3, Why Mark's Future Should Scare You, and Lessons Learned from THE WALKING DEAD — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

time5 hours ago

  • Geek Tyrant

Robert Kirkman Breaks Down INVIBCIBLE Season 3, Why Mark's Future Should Scare You, and Lessons Learned from THE WALKING DEAD — GeekTyrant

Robert Kirkman knows how to wreck a superhero emotionally and physically, and Invincible Season 3 is a showcase of that skill. As the second half of the season wrapped on Prime Video, fans were left reeling from the mental toll on Mark Grayson (Steven Yeun), his brutal battle with Conquest, and the growing realization that Mark may be heading down a darker path than anyone expected. In a recent interview with Deadline, Kirkman offered a candid breakdown of Mark's psychological spiral, his complicated relationship with his half-brother Oliver, and how experience from The Walking Dead helped shape a more structurally sound adaptation this time around. Mark's Crossroads Season 3 is all about what kind of man—and hero—Mark is becoming. One of the most telling dynamics this year is the brotherly bond (or fracture) between Mark and Oliver, the half-Viltrumite sibling he barely knows but is now responsible for mentoring. The tension between their moral codes becomes a mirror that Mark can't look away from. 'I think it's good to give Mark as many outside influences as possible,' Kirkman said. '...One of the results of interacting with his father was that he brought Oliver home. Oliver has the same dad but is from an alien world... For Mark, his feelings can sometimes be scary when he seemingly agrees with some of the crazy things that Oliver is saying.' That inner conflict is no small matter. As Kirkman explains, Oliver starts off saying 'harsh things that make you worry,' but by the end of the season, Mark finds himself more aligned with his brother than before. 'So, by the end of this season, you should be worried for where Mark is headed in Season 4 and beyond.' A Relentless Descent Mark's downward arc isn't just philosophical, it's paved in blood. From Powerplex to the Invincible War and finally to his knock-down, drag-out fight with Conquest, Kirkman makes clear that the exhaustion and trauma have layered onto Mark's conscience in ways that aren't going away. 'He is unsure of himself and fears that he could be on the path getting closer and closer to what Omni-Man was... Without having any time to process that or work through it... Conquest comes and does more damage that Mark feels responsible for,' Kirkman said. It's that spiral of grief, guilt, self-doubt, then rage that sets the stage for Season 4's more dangerous version of Mark. As Kirkman put it, 'We're trying to deal with what it would be like to have the burden of the responsibility of having this much power... and we're excited about how the show goes into some really dark places.' The Teenage Factor But this is still a coming-of-age story, and Mark's contradictions are intentional. 'He's a somewhat erratic character by design,' Kirkman noted. 'We're constantly pushing this character to make bold statements and then go against those statements... That's kind of the life that we all experienced as a teenager... and it's fun to see a character go through that same process while he's able to crush planets.' Walking Dead Wisdom If Invincible feels more structurally sound than The Walking Dead ever was. Kirkman says the experience of adapting a comic he hadn't finished yet taught him some hard lessons. 'There were times [on The Walking Dead] when it was like, 'Yeah, let's make that different. That'll be fun.' But then you get to Season 6–Season 9, and you have entire storylines from the comic that don't work anymore...' Now, with Invincible, Kirkman says they've done the opposite. 'There's a lot of decisions that were made on Invincible Season 1–Season 3... so that when we're going Season 5–Season 6... we know the track has been laid.' The Conquest Challenge Of course, making Invincible isn't just emotionally demanding, it's a logistical beast. The fight between Mark and Conquest in the finale was one of the toughest scenes yet to animate. Kirkman revealed: 'We had to get extra board artists to come in... Usually, you have four or five board artists... I think we had six or seven that were doing two to four-minute chunks... It was an all-hands-on-deck kind of effort.' That battle was a key point of escalation—and that escalation is something Kirkman is intentionally building season after season. 'We're trying to make the show an escalating show... so that when you watch the show, you get a sense of growth... and intensifying stakes.' The Role of Violence As for the show's signature blood-and-guts spectacle? Kirkman says the violence only works if it means something. 'I don't really think of the violence as are we going too far... I'm thinking, is this violence resulting in the correct emotions we're trying to elicit...?' he said. 'We're trying to push the emotional buttons... so that you have that feeling.' And while streaming gives them room to push boundaries, Kirkman points to The Boys as the trailblazer that lets Invincible fly under the radar. 'I get to watch that show and go, 'We can do anything.'' Where It's All Going Mark Grayson may have set out to be Earth's protector, but Season 3 leaves us with a much more complicated reality: he's not just battling villains anymore—he's fighting who he might become. And that, according to Kirkman, is exactly the point. 'By the end of this season, you should be worried for where Mark is headed in Season 4 and beyond.' If that's not a warning shot, nothing is.

Why AI Stock Astera Labs Was Crushing It This Week
Why AI Stock Astera Labs Was Crushing It This Week

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Why AI Stock Astera Labs Was Crushing It This Week

The company has found an appropriate partner to help it win more AI-related business. It's teaming up with a specialty chipmaker based in Asia. 10 stocks we like better than Astera Labs › According to data compiled by S&P Global Market Intelligence, Astera Labs (NASDAQ: ALAB) stock's price was floating almost 11% higher week to date on early Friday morning. Investors were mainly reacting to news the tech infrastructure company reported about a new business tie-up with an Asian peer. On Monday, Astera and Taiwanese chipmaker AIChip Technologies announced in a joint press release that they have formed a strategic business partnership. Together, the two will aim to exploit opportunities afforded by sky-high demand for artificial intelligence (AI) functionalities. AIChip, which specializes in application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) chips, and Astera are teaming up to offer "validated, interoperable solutions for hyperscalers building next-generation AI infrastructure," according to the press release. As the name suggests, a hyperscaler is essentially an extremely large data center. These are in vogue now due to the heavy resource requirements of AI. Astera and AIChip offered almost no details about their new partnership, including its financial parameters. Given that, it's tough to gauge how this collaboration might affect their fundamentals. Judging by the market's reaction, though, investors don't seem to mind -- teaming up on projects has clear potential to benefit both companies. I think AI companies like Astera are in the midst of a gold rush. I'd absolutely consider buying the stock. Before you buy stock in Astera Labs, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Astera Labs wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $659,171!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $891,722!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 995% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 172% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 9, 2025 Eric Volkman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Why AI Stock Astera Labs Was Crushing It This Week was originally published by The Motley Fool Sign in to access your portfolio

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