In today's edition: FoodCourt pauses operations || Nigeria expands its crypto sandbox || Kenyan government loses 'block first' powers || South Africa eyes AI campaign
2026/07/06
In today's edition: Quick Fire 🔥 with Sheriff Adedokun || LemFi acquires Wealth8 || South Africa proposes crypto tax rules || Who secured the bag?
2026/07/03
AXM is No. 4 prioritizing empathy, autonomy and flexibility—the core principles that support AXM’s culture of awareness SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 21, 2026 /PRNewswire
2026/01/22
The disruption generated by AI enables the acceleration and industrialisation of the creation of internal solutions and start-ups through centres of excellence
2025/12/24
The post Prime Video Lands Its Second 100% Rotten Tomatoes Scored Show In A Week appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. While all eyes are on Fallout season 2, which will arrive on Amazon Prime Video in just two weeks, while you wait, there are two shows that the service has running now that have a 100% Rotten Tomatoes score from critics. Not something you see every day when we’re talking about series released within the past month on a single service. The first show is The Mighty Nein, which I’ve talked about before. It’s the second campaign from Critical Role, who previously did The Legend of Vox Machina, which also had a 100% Rotten Tomatoes score, but from three seasons. The Mighty Nein, after debuting on November 16, has started off the same way. Now, Netflix has gotten a new season of The Family Man for the first time in over four years. The show is an Indian spy thriller originally created for Amazon Prime Video, and season 1 aired back in 2019. Thanks to COVID or what have you, production was delayed but now, The Family Man has returned with a 100% Rotten Tomatoes score, matching season 2. It doesn’t have all that many reviews in yet, but the series as a whole is widely well-received by both critics and fans. Here’s the synopsis: “Srikant Tiwari is a middle-class man who also serves as a world-class spy; he tries to balance his familial responsibilities with those at the highly secretive special cell of the National Intelligence Agency.” The Family Man season 3 was just released on November 20, meaning it was just a few days after The Mighty Nein, two 100% scored seasons within a week. Completely different productions, obviously, but great in their own ways. Interestingly, The Family Man is made by the duo of Raj and DK, who I recall made Amazon’s Citadel: Honey Bunny, the Indian…
2025/11/30
The post One Of TV’s Best New Shows Boasts A 100% Rotten Tomatoes Score appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. I just wrote up a list of four recent 100% Rotten Tomatoes-scored shows you should be watching, but now, we’ve just seen one more released that I suppose I should add to that list. That would be Amazon Prime Video’s The Mighty Nein. It is another animated series from Critical Role, this time, based on the second campaign. It takes place 20 years after the first campaign, which was adapted into The Legend of Vox Machina. It’s not a 1:1 recounting of events, but formatted to make a good TV show instead. And it is a good TV show, as there are a full 14 reviews in, giving it a perfect score, not like, four. It’s too early for audience scores yet. Will that chance? Well, probably not. The Legend of Vox Machina has a perfect 100% Rotten Tomatoes score as well, but it did so managing to keep those perfect reviews for three seasons, which is no small feat. It ended up with a 94% total audience score as well. So it stands to reason that if the quality of The Mighty Nein remains the same, we should see similar results, and this is one of the most acclaimed western animated series I’ve ever seen, given these results across four seasons of two shows. The Mighty Nein brings back almost the entire voice cast of The Legend of Vox Machina, this time playing different roles. That includes the likes of Laura Bailey, Matthew Mercer and Ashley Johnson, three of the biggest names in video game voicework especially, along with Taliesin Jaffe, Liam O’Brien, Marisha Ray, Sam Reigel, Travis Willingham and more. NEW YORK, NEW YORK – OCTOBER 09: (L-R) Liam O’Brien, Marisha Ray, Sam Riegel, Laurie Hernandez, Matthew Mercer, Laura Bailey, Travis Willingham, Taliesin Jaffe and Ashley Johnson attend…
2025/11/20
The post Critical Role’s ‘The Mighty Nein’ First Trailer Drops At New York Comic-Con appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Mighty Nein Credit: Prime Video I’m one of the few fans of The Legend Of Vox Machina who has no interest whatsoever in watching Critical Role’s actual roleplaying podcast. As someone who plays tabletop RPGs and has since I was a kid, whatever time I have to spend tabletop gaming is spent actually gaming (or designing games) rather than watching multi-hour long sessions of other people playing, even when they’re talented voice actors like the cast of Critical Role. However, I absolutely fell in love with Vox Machina, which is based on the first Critical Role campaign. I love the characters – Scanlan and Pike and Grog and all the rest – and the action-packed, stories of magic and mayhem, and the humor and the heart. And Scanlan’s music. I also really love the fact that episodes are about 25 minutes long, which fits my schedule a lot better than three-hour podcasts. Vox Machina, which is geared toward adult audiences with its ribald humor and occasional nudity and blood and gore, is one of the shows I point to when I argue that more fantasy should be animated rather than live-action. The First Laws novels by Joe Abercrombie, for instance, would make a perfect adult animated series. In any case, I (purposefully) know very little about The Mighty Nein, the new animated series based on Critical Role’s second campaign. I’ve heard it described this way: If Vox Machina are The Avengers, the Mighty Nein are the Guardians of the Galaxy. I’ve avoided spoilers because I want to go into this series as blind as I went into Vox Machina. Amazon has just released the first trailer for the show – we’re being bombarded by new trailers thanks to the New York Comic-Con, including this amazing trailer for A Knight…
2025/10/10
AI-generated texts gain trust not through evidence but through structure. Passive voice, fake balance, and false references simulate authority. We must audit how AI speaks, not just what it says, or institutions will mistake form for truth.
2025/09/18
The post Smashing Pumpkins Chart A Second Album Debut In 2025 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Smashing Pumpkins’ Machina / The Machines of God reenters U.K. charts with its twenty-fifth anniversary reissue, debuting on sales and vinyl lists. CHICAGO, IL – MARCH, 1997: American musician, singer, songwriter, and professional wrestling promoter Billy Corgan, of the American alternative rock band The Smashing Pumpkins, performs on stage during a concert circa March, 1997 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Bob Berg/Getty Images) Getty Images 25 years after its release, Machina / The Machines of God is a hit again. The Smashing Pumpkins set is back on the United Kingdom’s charts following a special anniversary re-release. The project arrives on a pair of tallies and quietly returns to a third — decades after fans first fell in love with the full-length. Machina / The Machines of God Lands on Two Charts The Smashing Pumpkins album appears on two rosters this frame for the first time, and it’s a top 40 bestseller on both of them. Machina / The Machines of God debuts at No. 26 on the Official Albums Sales chart and starts at No. 16 on the Official Vinyl Albums tally. A Second 2025 Debut for the Band Machina / The Machines of God marks the Smashing Pumpkins’ second debut of 2025 on those charts. Earlier this year, Siamese Dream — another classic in the band’s catalog — also arrived on both lists, and it did so in loftier spots. Machina / The Machines of God Returns to Another Chart Beyond the two entries, Machina / The Machines of God also returns to the Official Physical Albums chart, landing at No. 23. The set has now spent six weeks on that list across its lifetime. When it first appeared in late 2000, Machina debuted at No. 7, which still sits as its all-time peak on the tally that…
2025/09/04
Ethos Ex Machina explains how AI-generated texts appear credible without real content. By using structural markers such as balanced coordination, cautious negation, and formal scaffolding, large language models fabricate the illusion of authority. This credibility without verification now circulates in academic, legal, and institutional settings, raising urgent questions about trust and legitimacy.
2025/08/25