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Just After Launching Qwen3.5, Qwen's Core Team Walked Out. Is This the Last Great Qwen Model
Yesterday I was testing Qwen3.5-4B on my machine, genuinely impressed by what a 4B model was doing with images and reasoning. Then I opened X and saw a five word post from Junyang Lin, the man who built Qwen from the ground up: "bye my beloved qwen." That was it. No explanation, no drama, just a goodbye. Within hours the replies were flooding in. Developers, researchers, open source contributors all asking the same thing — what just happened? And then Elon Musk's comment on Qwen3.5 calling it "impressive intelligence density" surfaced, and Lin replied with a simple "thx elon." People in the comments started connecting the dots — was he already gone when he replied? Did he know? Nobody is quite sure what to make of that exchange but it made the whole thing feel even stranger. Lin wasn't alone. Yu Bowen, who led post-training for Qwen, resigned the same day. Hui Binyuan, a core contributor focused on coding, had already left in January. Three of the most important people behind one of the best open source AI model families in the world, gone within months of each other. I had just tested the model. I had just written about why it was worth your attention. And now the people who built it had walked out.
YUMI Text and image to AI World Generator
We've all seen AI video generators that spit out cool clips. But what if I told you Yume 1.5 goes way beyond that into full-on digital world creation? It’s not just a video. Not a static image. It's a living, breathing world you can explore using only your keyboard. This open-source model doesn’t just create scenes, it builds entire worlds you can genuinely explore
Why Google and Anthropic Are Banning OpenClaw Users 4 Reasons Behind the Crackdown
You know something's wrong when companies start banning their own paying customers without explanation. Last week, Google restricted access for some AI Ultra users (those paying $250/month). Anthropic made similar moves with Claude Pro subscribers around the same time. The connection? Both were targeting people using OpenClaw. OpenClaw, if you haven't heard of it, is this third-party tool that turns AI chatbots into automation agents. Instead of just asking Claude questions, you can have it control your computer, run tasks, fill out forms—stuff like that. Developers loved it. Until both companies suddenly decided it violated their terms of service. What's frustrating is how vague both companies have been about the actual reasons. Google cited "misuse of OAuth authentication." Anthropic updated its terms to prohibit third-party "harnesses." But neither explained what specific security issues, if any, triggered the sudden enforcement. I started digging into what might be behind the crackdown. Some security researchers have raised concerns about how OpenClaw handles permissions and credentials. There are questions about the plugin ecosystem. And there's been discussion in developer communities about whether the tool's architecture creates risks that the AI companies couldn't ignore. So here's what we know, what's still unclear, and the five risks that likely pushed AI companies to draw the line.
SparkVSR lets you control AI video upscaling with just a few keyframes
A research team from Texas A&M and YouTube quietly dropped SparkVSR on GitHub. No big announcement or hype cycle. Just a repo and a paper. Everyone right now is chasing text to video. Sora, Kling, Wan, the list keeps growing. But nobody is talking about the much harder problem sitting right underneath all of it. What happens when your existing footage, your old clips, your AI generated videos, just do not look good enough? You upscale them, the AI guesses, and you get flickering textures and smeared faces with zero way to fix it. SparkVSR is the first tool I have seen that actually lets you step in and correct that.
Open-Source AI Text-to-Speech Models You Can Run Locally That Sound Realistic
If you’re creating content or building products then relying entirely on cloud APIs isn’t your only option anymore. Open-source text-to-speech models have improved dramatically. Some now produce voices that sound surprisingly natural with lower long-term cost, and full ownership over your deployment. If you’re generating narration for YouTube, building an AI assistant, or integrating voice into your next app, running a powerful TTS model locally can give you flexibility the cloud simply can’t. Here are five open-source AI voice models worth knowing.
Is the Internet Still Open or Are the Doors Closing What 2026 Looks Like
Have you ever felt the magic of how we used to explore the internet? I remember those days sitting at my clunky desktop, clicking through hyperlinks like they were portals to unknown worlds. It wasn't just browsing, it was exploring. Back then, one search could take you anywhere. You might start with a movie review, drift into a fan forum, stumble across someone’s late-night blog post, and somehow feel like you had discovered a hidden corner of the internet meant just for you. Each click mattered. Each page felt earned.
Best Free fonts for editing
10 popular fonts that can make your edits look more cinematic and professional. The good part? All these fonts are free and can be downloaded from DaFont, Google Fonts, and other free font resources.

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Ovi: Open Source AI Video & Audio Generator Like Sora 2 and Veo 3

Ovi is an Open Source alternative to Veo3 & Sora 2 that can generate AI Video with Audio, creators can produce 5-second high-quality videos with audio at 24 frames per second, supporting multiple aspect ratios including 9:16, 16:9, and 1:1. This makes it perfect for social media clips, marketing content, and even educational short videos.

Cupscale Free Open Source AI Image Upscaler for Windows

Cupscale provides a user-friendly interface for AI-powered image upscaling. It uses ESRGAN & Real-ESRGAN models to increase image resolution without losing details. Users can apply multiple models at once using Model Chaining, work with entire folders of images via Batch Upscaling, and even directly process images from the clipboard.

Reor: Private & Local AI Knowledge Management & Note-Taking App

Reor is an innovative, AI-driven personal knowledge management app designed specifically for those who prioritize privacy, be they creators, thinkers, students, or professionals. What sets Reor apart is that everything operates entirely on your device. This means features like vector embeddings, semantic search, RAG-based Q&A, and all of your markdown notes stay secure and local.

Everywhere AI – The Ultimate Context-Aware AI Assistant for Windows, macOS & Linux

Everywhere is a next-generation context-aware AI assistant that integrates seamlessly across your desktop environment. Unlike traditional chatbots, it understands what’s happening on your screen in real-time, no screenshots, no switching tabs, just pure instant intelligence.

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10 Faceless YouTube Channel Ideas

10 Faceless YouTube Channel Ideas In 2026

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Finding the perfect niche can feel challenging if you don't want to show your face in YouTube videos
Five proven ways to boost instgram reels reach

5 Proven Ways to Boost Your Instagram Reels Reach in 2025

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Instagram is continuously evolving and so do we, when I created my first page, during the initial stages my reels were barely getting views,...
Find Content Creation Niche with 3 easy steps

3 Simple Steps to Find Your Niche as a Content Creator

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If you're thinking to start your content creation journey, the first question that comes in your mind could be "What to Create?" and when you scroll through Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn, and see creators with clear focus on their niche like fitness, finance, coding, fashion, motivation. Most of the new creators probably wonder at this point that if everything is already being created then what should we create?