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Geeks featured post, a Geeks Media favorite.
Reviewing "Jingle All the Way," the Sequel, and My Ideas for a Threequel
Merry Christmas, all!! Among the many reasons why so many (myself included) love Christmas is the movies and holiday related shows. Ever since movies have been around, we have seen holiday related films hit theaters, and they've evolved so much since then. We all have our favorites. We all have the long-winded debate about a certain film being a Christmas movie. I have my favorites as far as holiday films, and one of them is definitely Jingle All the Way.
By Clyde E. Dawkins2 months ago in Geeks
China's Robot Revolution- Over 2 Million Machines Powering the World's Manufacturing Superpower
Hey there, fellow tech enthusiasts and curious minds! Imagine walking into a factory where hundreds of robotic arms dance in perfect sync, welding, assembling, and packing products faster and more precisely than any human team could dream of. No coffee breaks, no fatigue just relentless productivity. This isn't a scene from a sci-fi movie; it's everyday reality in China's manufacturing hubs today. Welcome to the heart of the world's robot revolution!
By Arjun. S. Gaikwad2 months ago in Geeks
Why Perplexity AI Feels Like a Calm Guide in a Noisy Internet
The internet was once a place of curiosity. You asked a question and followed the trail. Over time, that trail became crowded. Ads, pop-ups, half-answers, and rushed opinions started competing for attention. Searching stopped feeling thoughtful and began to feel tiring. Many people now open a browser already feeling overwhelmed.
By Muqadas khan2 months ago in Geeks
Did Vic Morrow Know He Was Going to Die on the Set of Twilight Zone: The Movie?
It has become part of the lore surrounding the horrific accident that killed Vic Morrow and child actors Myca Din Le and Renee Shin Ye Chen that Morrow somehow predicted his own death.
By Movies of the 80s2 months ago in Geeks
Looney Tunes Review: "Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century"
As a kid, you think of cartoons as being wholly comedic, but as you get older, you see more depth into your favorite cartoon shorts. Yes, the comedy's there, but there's also action, there's drama, and in some cases, tragedy. Chuck Jones had a knack for being well-rounded with his creations. His cartoons spanned a number of different genres, but the comedy is often there. One such short of Jones' that stood out among many others: the heavily acclaimed Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century.
By Clyde E. Dawkins2 months ago in Geeks
Preventing Frame Drops When LLM Calls Occur During Navigation
The first time I felt it, I didn’t look at a profiler. I felt it in my thumb. I was navigating quickly between two screens, the way people do without thinking, and the transition hesitated for a split second. No freeze. No crash. Just a tiny hitch, like the app briefly forgot where it was going. That kind of hesitation is hard to explain to someone who hasn’t felt it, but once you do, you can’t unfeel it.
By Samantha Blake2 months ago in Geeks
In Defense of the Makers: Why Disney Fandom Must Actively Support Human Creativity
Disney's enduring appeal lies in more than just stories; it sells feelings of wonder, nostalgia, and belonging — a century-long magic crafted by human artists, animators, and storytellers. However, this legacy now faces an urgent challenge as artificial intelligence is integrated into creative pipelines.
By Jenna Deedy3 months ago in Geeks
Why App Projects Go Over Budget More Often Than Expected?
The spreadsheet looked calm when I first opened it. Neat columns. Reasonable numbers. A timeline that felt ambitious but fair. I remember sitting there mid-morning, sunlight cutting across the table, thinking we had finally planned one cleanly. No excess. No padding. Just enough room to build what we believed we understood.
By Samantha Blake3 months ago in Geeks
Waiting to Exhale 30th Anniversary
30 years ago, Waiting to Exhale has debut in theaters becoming the most highest grossing black film during the nineties era. The film adaptation centers on four black women living in the Phoenix metropolitan area and their relationships with men and one another. The film sparked acclaim and a cult following from fans of the film and the novel due to its powerful, relatable story of Black women's friendships and struggles, a star-studded cast with off-screen chemistry, an iconic, chart-topping soundtrack produced by Babyface, and director Forest Whitaker's vision, all culminating in a massive box office success that proved the commercial viability of films centered on diverse female experiences and paved the way for more inclusive storytelling in Hollywood.
By Gladys W. Muturi3 months ago in Geeks










