Top 25 Anime Netflix Originals

This anime series is based on Go Nagai’s manga and created by the studio Science SARU, with direction by Masaaki Yuasa. It tells the story of Akira Fudo, who transforms into Devilman to fight demons secretly living among people. The show has ten episodes, is set in modern times, and offers a fresh take on the original story’s main ideas. It’s praised for its fast-paced animation, electronic music, and complete storyline within a single season.

Top 15 Most Unfair Anime Battles Ever

This practice match was set up for Genos to collect data on Saitama, not for a genuine fight. Saitama doesn’t try hard, quickly surpassing Genos with incredible speed that creates visible afterimages. He stops the fight by holding back a powerful punch just before it hits Genos, creating a large canyon with the force of the stopped blow. The match highlights that Genos is really just studying Saitama, and how much stronger and more controlled Saitama is.

Biogen’s Stake: A Quiet Exit

In a quarterly disclosure, the ever-practical J.L. Bainbridge & Co. Inc. revealed their sale of 119,376 Biogen shares. A sum of $16.1 million, based on the average closing price. Now, they hold a mere 2,969 shares, valued at $415,898. How very… modest.

Oklo: A Million-Making Mirage or Nuclear Maelstrom?

Electricity, that modern sorcerer’s elixir, will swell in appetite like a dethroned monarch consuming the world’s moonlight. By 2050, the global thirst for it will have swelled 78%-a number that tastes of both triumph and delirium. Here, in this fog of figures, Oklo’s Aurora reactors, those mechanical leviathans, puff their metallic lungs. Designed by scholars once cloaked in moth-eaten sashes at Argonne, their nuclear nectar is to be sold not as hardware, but as sugar-dusted steam to data centers and defense barns. The company’s ledger of net-zero gold is written in non-binding handshakes, its total-14 gigawatts-enough to make St. Petersburg’s tsars weep with envy. Yet beneath the parchment lies a riddle: will these signatures outlive the ink, or vanish like smoke from a chimney in winter?

Amazon’s Prime Perk: A Satire of Retail Gluttony

Act I: The Agonizing Interlude. You, dear reader, have doubtless suffered this torment. The package departs, yet inspiration strikes too late! Must one don trousers and pilgrimage to a mortal shop? Perish the thought! Amazon’s latest invention, Add to Delivery, now permits mortals to append items to existing shipments with a mere tap-a digital incantation whispered into one’s palm-sized oracle.

The Echo of PineStone’s Oracle Exit: A Reflection on Profit, Loss, and the Endless Game of Capital

On the surface, the move appears simple. PineStone, in its infinite wisdom-or perhaps from the subtle nudging of a market pulse-cut back on its Oracle Corporation (ORCL) position, shedding 161,430 shares, valued at $41.1 million. After this retreat, their remaining stake in Oracle stood at 3.4 million shares, a modest sum by comparison, worth $964.5 million at the quarter’s end. One can almost hear the faint rustling of paper, the shuffle of spreadsheets, as this vast fortune sways in the currents of corporate maneuvering.

Buffett’s Chevron Gambit: A Value Investor’s Paradox

Chevron, you see, is a stock that wears its contradictions with aristocratic indifference. Discounted yet not cheap, dividend-rich yet growth-challenged, it is the kind of paradox that makes the S&P 500-trading at 31 times earnings-look like a spendthrift’s promissory note. The market, that fickle mistress, offers no obvious trinkets for the bargain hunter, but Chevron, in contrast, dons the modest habit of 19 times earnings. A sartorial choice that whispers, “I am not for everyone.”

‘One Piece’ Mistakes You’ll Never Be Able to Unsee

Throughout the production of the series, some of Zoro’s defining characteristics haven’t always been drawn the same way. For example, the scar over his left eye sometimes appears fainter, and the length of his chest scar has occasionally been shortened. There have also been a few instances where his earrings—which he normally wears only on his left ear—appear on both ears, likely due to errors during animation. These kinds of small inconsistencies are common in long-running anime series, especially when multiple teams of animators are working on it at the same time.

Wealth Advisory Sells $15 Million in Delta Stock as Airline Lags Market Rally

According to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission released on Friday, J. L. Bainbridge & Co. reduced its stake in Delta Air Lines (DAL) by 258,492 shares in the third quarter. The estimated transaction value, based on the average closing price in the quarter, was approximately $14.8 million. Following the trade, the fund held 509,256 shares of Delta Air Lines.