Smart Ralph is a Claude Code plugin that turns your vague feature ideas into structured specs, then executes them task-by-task. Like having a tiny product team in your terminal. You: "Add user ...
Cybersecurity researchers have flagged a "coordinated malware campaign" on the JetBrains Marketplace that has published no less than 15 malicious plugins capable of exfiltrating artificial ...
An attacker tampered with trusted JavaScript files used by WordPress sites running PushEngage, OptinMonster, and TrustPulse, turning those files into a way to break into the sites. When a site ...
Teach You a Lesson's director has recently hinted at the future of the show. The South Korean series stars Kim Mu Yeol, Jin Ki Joo, Ha Young, PO and Lee Sung Min among others. Amid the bunch of ...
Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (REDs) has various different risk factors, numerous signs and symptoms and is heavily influenced by one’s environment. Accordingly, there is no singular validated ...
Korean series Teach You a Lesson has a premise that’s hard to resist. In schools where bullies wreak havoc, the Educational Rights Protection Bureau swoops in to restore order. Part action, part ...
Getting a god roll Precision Frame Shotguns like Pure Recollection makes it a premier DPS weapon in PvE, and are a menace in the right hands in the Crucible. That goes double if you build around its ...
Teach You a Lesson concludes with its major conflicts resolved. While the Educational Rights Protection Bureau could theoretically continue tackling new cases, the story itself feels largely complete.
Turning $2 into $20,000 has never been easier — if you’re lucky. Some uncirculated U.S. $2 bills may be worth up to $20,000, but it depends on a few factors, according to Heritage Auctions, one of the ...
Starting with a thrilling premise in the first episode, Teach You a Lesson escalates its drama in Episode 2 and shifts its focus beyond a single bullying incident to a school that is run by fear, ...
Teach You a Lesson concludes with its major conflicts resolved. While the Educational Rights Protection Bureau could theoretically continue tackling new cases, the story itself feels largely complete.