Image 1 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 2 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 3 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 4 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 5 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 6 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 7 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 8 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 9 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 10 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 11 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package
Image 12 — W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package

W2C my 9kg Mulebuy package

Yo guys, another haul finally touched down 🙌

Wanted to change up my wardrobe a little so grabbed a mix of summer stuff, some cleaner pieces and a few accessories. Mostly went for things I can actually match together.

Mulebuy this time, honestly smooth experience.

Shipped to EU with insurance and everything arrived in around 6 days. Package was protected well and no missing items.

Shipping was about $467.

Stats: 179cm / 72kg

Items:

Dior

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7801045184

Balenciaga

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7502647803

Ralph Lauren Shirt

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7800270361

Ralph Lauren Shorts

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7801035466

Ami Polo

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7797916307

Ami Shorts

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7798916315

Supreme Jersey

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7779222267

Hellstar Shorts

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7800868570

Stone Island

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7494804832

Represent Shorts

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7763401266

Carhartt

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7798880871

LV Shorts

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7798090381

Chrome Hearts Wallet

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7516056526

Denim Tears Set

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7798102153

Van Cleef Bracelet

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7512784800

Chrome Hearts Belt

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7632209687

LV Belt

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7744416828

Hermès Slides

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7509283011

Jordan 4s

https://weidian.com/item.html?itemID=7647560920

Really happy with how everything came out. Summer fits sorted for a while 😭

Drop questions if anyone needs sizing/help.

u/sandip22890 — 12 hours ago

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u/sandip22890 — 1 day ago

First futures contest — is 1k USDT enough to even try?

Never done a futures trading contest before but i keep seeing this world cup event pop up. looked at the rules and bydfi's Trading Arena needs at least 1,000 USDT in USDT-M futures volume just to qualify for rewards. idk if thats realistic for a first timer or if i'd just blow through it chasing a leaderboard. is 1k enough to participate without wrecking myself, or should i just sit this one out?

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 1 day ago

Best IPTV Canada 2026 : Finally I Found the Best IPTV Service Providers That Actually Works for Canada Viewers

​

I keep seeing people from Canada, the USA, the UK, and across Europe asking the same thing: which IPTV service actually stays reliable over time? Not just for a quick trial, but during real-world use evenings, live sports, and peak-hour streaming. After trying a few IPTV providers that worked fine at first and then slowly became unstable, I decided to stop switching constantly and properly test one service long-term.

The one I ended up keeping was 👉 IPTV Canada. iptv canada

Instead of judging it after a few days, I used it daily watching news, sports, and regular entertainment at different times of the day. What stood out wasn’t big marketing claims, but how consistent it felt. Channels opened quickly, streams stayed smooth most of the time, and I wasn’t constantly refreshing or restarting during live events.

For IPTV USA, I was able to watch channels like ABC, NBC, FOX, CBS, ESPN, and CNN without major issues. For IPTV Canada, networks such as CBC, CTV, Global, TSN, and Sportsnet were available and usable, even during busy hours. For IPTV UK, I had access to BBC One, BBC Two, ITV, Channel 4, Channel 5, Sky Sports, and BT Sport. And for Europe, there were solid sections covering France, Germany, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands, and other regions, along with international content.

Peak-hour performance is where most IPTV providers struggle, especially during major events or sports. That’s usually when buffering and quality drops begin. streams stayed more stable compared to other IPTV subscriptions I tested. It wasn’t perfect all the time, but it handled traffic better than most.

Device flexibility also made a difference. I switched between a Smart TV, Firestick, Android TV, and my phone, and the setup was simple across all of them. The experience stayed consistent without needing to reconfigure things every time I changed devices.

Another thing I appreciated was having everything in one place. Alongside live TV from Canada, USA, UK, and Europe, there was also a solid VOD section with movies and series, so I didn’t need multiple subscriptions.

After months of testing different IPTV providers, IPTV-Canada.co became the IPTV service I continued using because it stayed more reliable over time. For viewers across Canada, the USA, the UK, and Europe who are tired of buffering and unstable streams, long-term consistency is what really matters.

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 3 days ago
▲ 2 r/appdev

Preparing an app for the Chinese market is more complicated

My team has been researching what it would take to launch one of our apps in China, and I was thinking the biggest tasks would be localization, payment integration, and making sure the infrastructure could handle users in another region.

I've realized that China is almost an entirely different digital ecosystem. The work is not only translating the interface or pointing traffic to a different server. Almost every topic seems to open the door to something new that I hadn't considered before.

I'm also reading about WeChat Mini Programs and Official Accounts,ICP filings, local cloud providers, app distribution outside Google Play, data compliance requirements, and how websites or APIs that work perfectly well elsewhere can behave very differently for users in mainland China.

Even the mobile strategy feels different. In most markets the obvious answer is to build or improve your native app, but in China many companies put a huge amount of effort into WeChat because that's where users already spend much of their time.

The infrastructure side is also interesting. Normally we think about adding a CDN, monitoring latency, and scaling services as traffic groes, in China, those don't seem to be the only considerations. Hosting location, compliance, DNS behavior, and local regulations all appear to influence the technical architecture from the very beginning.

It also surprisingly difficult to separate current best practices from outdated advice. Some articles make it sound like you need to redesign everything from scratch, while others suggest that a few well-planned changes are enough. Since many of the guides online are several years old, it's hard to know which recommendations still reflect how companies are approaching the market today.

We're still in the research phase, but the process has been genuinely fascinating. It's made me appreciate that preparing an app for China isn't simply another international launch. It feels much closer to learning how to build for a completely different digital ecosystem, with its own platforms, expectations, and technical requirements.

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 4 days ago

Quick question: Is Dokie AI's layout automation worth the zero-design trade-off?

I am desperately trying to stop wasting time dragging text boxes and fixing alignments in PowerPoint for my weekly internal syncs.

Someone recommended Dokie AI as a text-first alternative. I dropped some nested Markdown notes into it, and the parsing engine is actually flawless—it auto-mapped my multi-level lists into clean column grids instantly.

But man, the output is brutally plain. It basically looks like a raw Notion page or a GitHub wiki on a grid.

Quick question for the productivity geeks here: For those who use markdown-to-slide pipelines, is skipping the manual formatting phase worth showing up to a meeting with absolutely zero design flair? Do your teams actually care if the slides look this bare-bones, as long as the data is clear?

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 4 days ago

My back finally doesn’t hate me after babywearing

Real talk: I didn’t care about lumbar support until I had my baby and my lower back started screaming after 15 minutes of carrying him.

Tried a few carriers, then landed on the momcozy PureHug. It has this EVA pad that actually hits the right spot on my low back, and the weight feels way more balanced across my hips/shoulders. I’ve seen C-section moms say the front panel doesn’t press on their scar either, which is a nice bonus.

Scrolling through reviews, a bunch of parents mentioned wearing it for hours with no pain, and some said it handles heavy toddlers well—my chunk is 99th percentile, so that sold me.

Everyone’s different, but if your back is wrecked like mine, this one’s worth a look.

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 5 days ago
▲ 2 r/Casino

which one in these online casino has been the most reliable for you in canada?

I've been meaning to try a new online casino here in Canada and when I searched for it these three keep popping up ..Betty , Jackpot City , and 247iBET. every review site seems to rank them differently so I'm not really sure which one to pick. If you've actually played on any of them , which one would you go with? I'm mostly looking for smooth withdrawals , decent game selection and a site that's reliable overall.

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 5 days ago

I’m more interested in how a printer recovers than how it prints when everything goes right

A clean successful print is nice, but I’m starting to care more about what happens when something goes wrong.

Most printers look good when the file is simple, the filament is fresh, and the first layer sticks perfectly. The real test for me is what happens when the filament runs out, a print needs to be paused, the first layer fails, or the filament system does something unexpected.

I’ve been using the SparkX i7 recently, and so far most of my prints have been pretty normal. Nothing dramatic yet, but that also means I have not fully tested the recovery side. I’m curious how it behaves when the situation is less perfect.

The main thing I want to test is filament runout. In theory, having a sensor and the CFS Lite should make that less stressful, but I still want to see how clean the process feels in real use. Does it pause at the right time? Is swapping filament simple? Does the print resume cleanly, or do you get a visible mark where it restarted?

I’m also curious about pause/resume in general. Sometimes I want to pause a print to check something, change filament, clear a small issue, or just make sure nothing is going wrong. On older machines, I always felt a little nervous about pausing because I wasn’t sure if the resume would leave a blob, shift, or weird layer line.

Failed first layers are another part of this. Restarting a print sounds simple, but the workflow matters: cleaning the plate, checking the nozzle, re-running calibration, and sending the file again. If that process is smooth, small failures feel less annoying. If it is clunky, even a simple failure can waste a lot of time.

I’m not posting this because I’ve had a big failure. I’m more trying to learn what to expect before I trust it with longer prints or more multicolor jobs. A printer that handles recovery well is a lot easier to live with than one that only performs well when everything goes perfectly.

For other SparkX i7 users, how has failure recovery been for you? Any issues with filament runout, pause/resume, CFS Lite feeding, failed first layers, power loss recovery, or restarting a print after something goes wrong?

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 7 days ago

Sites with clearer topical organization seem less volatile

One trend I've noticed after recent updates is that sites with tighter topical organization appear much more stable.

It's less about publishing more articles and more about how everything connects together.

Has anyone else noticed that?

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 8 days ago

AI saves time until you're managing hundreds of pages

The first few batches of AI-assisted content usually look great.

The problem starts after a few hundred pages.

Patterns repeat, headings begin looking identical, and topical separation slowly disappears unless someone reviews everything manually.

Anyone found a workflow that scales without creating those issues?

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 8 days ago

Has anyone else seen rankings fade weeks after a successful migration?

We migrated a fairly large site about a month and a half ago.

Launch went smoothly redirects were tested, metadata was preserved, canonicals looked right, and crawl reports came back clean.

The confusing part is that traffic didn't dip right away. It slowly started declining around week four, mostly on sections that had previously performed well.

Curious if anyone else has seen delayed movement like this instead of an immediate impact.

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 8 days ago

Persistent agent memory tools compared after the Claude Tag launch

Now that Claude Tag is out, I think the interesting part isn’t the Slack bot UI. It’s the memory layer underneath it.

I already run Claude Code and Codex for coding work, mostly with local repos and self-hosted services. The thing I keep running into is that coding agents are pretty good inside a task window, but bad at remembering the boring work context: who decided what, which project is blocked, what follow-up got buried, what changed since last week.

So I looked at a few options that are trying to solve persistent work memory for agents.

  1. Claude Tag

Anthropic’s new thing. Lives in Slack, you @mention it, delegate work, and it keeps context across channels.

Pros:

probably the cleanest UX if your company already lives in Slack

Opus 4.8 behind it, so reasoning quality should be strong

autonomous monitoring makes sense for team ops, incident follow-ups, planning threads, etc.

least setup pain

Cons:

closed-source and cloud-hosted

team / enterprise gated from what I can tell

privacy question is real, since Slack is basically the company’s nervous system

not much control over memory internals, retention, or retrieval behavior

Best fit: teams that already trust Anthropic with company comms and want something managed.

  1. Mem0

This is more of a memory API / layer for AI apps. Less “AI coworker”, more “plug memory into your agent.”

Pros:

simple mental model, add user or session memory to agents

supports common LLM app patterns

useful if you’re building your own assistant or SaaS agent

easier to integrate than heavier frameworks

Cons:

not really a full work agent by itself

you still design the surrounding loops, permissions, UI, and connectors

long-term org memory is only as good as what you feed into it

Best fit: product teams adding memory to an existing agent app.

  1. OpenLoomi

This one is closer to the Claude Cowork / Claude Tag category, but open-source and local-first. Repo is by Meland Labs, Apache 2.0, current release is v0.6.1. I’ll drop the GitHub link in a comment to avoid making the post just a link drop.

Pros:

builds a structured work memory across connected tools, not just chat history

the context graph idea is useful: people, projects, decisions, follow-ups

has a forgetting/summarization approach instead of dumping everything into RAG

Time-Travel API is neat if you care what the agent knew on a given date

can expose skills to other agents, so Claude Code or Codex can reuse some context

Cons:

setup is real work

it only knows tools you connect and approve

early-stage, v0.6.1

bring your own LLM key

desktop-only right now

no GitHub connector yet, which is annoying for dev workflows

proactive reminders can get noisy until tuned

Best fit: self-hosters who want a local-first work memory layer and are okay with rough edges.

  1. Letta

More agent infrastructure than coworker. It came out of the MemGPT line of thinking, with persistent agents and explicit memory management.

Pros:

good if you want to build agents with memory as a first-class concept

more controllable than black-box hosted assistants

useful for researchy or custom agent architectures

self-hosting story is better than most managed agent platforms

Cons:

you’ll be building more yourself

not a drop-in teammate

integration work lands on you

less focused on daily work context across Gmail / Calendar / Notion style tools

Best fit: people building custom persistent agents, not people looking for a ready work assistant.

  1. Zep

Zep is also more infrastructure. It gives agents memory and context retrieval, with graph-ish approaches depending on the setup.

Pros:

practical for production agent apps

good fit when you need memory across users, sessions, and conversations

more backend-friendly than desktop coworker tools

has clearer product/API boundaries

Cons:

not aimed at replacing a human teammate in Slack or desktop workflows

you still need to define what matters and how agents act on it

less appealing if your priority is local-first personal work memory

Best fit: teams shipping agent features into an app.

TL;DR

Want managed Slack teammate: Claude Tag

Want memory API for your app: Mem0

Want local-first open-source work memory: OpenLoomi

Want persistent agent framework: Letta

Want production memory backend: Zep

My bias: for self-hosted dev workflows, I’d rather own the memory layer than rent it inside Slack. But if your org is already fine with cloud Slack ingestion, Claude Tag is probably the fastest path to something usable.

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 9 days ago

The one thing I pulled out of my CRM

Messaging.

Tried keeping everything in one place but syncing texts became a constant headache. Finally left the actual texting in Signal House and only push what really matters. Should’ve done it sooner. CRM feels usable again.

What have you moved out of your CRM because it wasn’t worth the hassle?

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 9 days ago

Ditching Subscription Fees for a Smart Family Calendar Setup

So, I finally got fed up with paying monthly fees just to keep my family organized with our old Skylight calendar. I mean, the costs add up, and I realized I was just paying for features I could get elsewhere without a subscription. Anyone else feeling this?

I decided to switch things up, and that's when I stumbled upon Apolosign's dual-mode digital calendar. It’s been a couple of months now, and I'm pretty satisfied. The best part? No subscription fees. It syncs with our Google Calendar, and my kids are actually doing their chores now thanks to the points and rewards system. Plus, it's got this customizable dashboard where I can have our meals, weather, and even music right there.

Of course, it's not perfect. It needs to stay plugged in, which limits where I can place it. And the voice control is Google Assistant only, so if you're used to Alexa controlling everything, you might miss that. But for me, the tradeoff is worth it to avoid those recurring fees.

TL;DR: Tired of subscription fees for family calendars, switched to Apolosign’s no-subscription model. It's not perfect, but worth it for me. How do you guys manage family scheduling without breaking the bank?

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 10 days ago

My backyard is World Cup-ready

Had a World Cup watch party in the backyard last weekend. I wanted the lawn to look a bit more like a pitch this time. So I looked up a few basic tips from people who maintain football pitches, and this is what I did:

- I trimmed it a little shorter than usual to get that cleaner pitch look.

- Made sure the lawn had a day to dry out so people weren't walking around on damp grass.

- I didn't do anything special beyond keeping up the usual mowing schedule with my Goat.

So when I started dragging out the projector and chairs that day, the lawn was already ready. Grass looked freshly groomed. One of my friends commented that the yard looked unusually tidy.

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 10 days ago
▲ 469 r/MMORPG

Anyone else just tired of MMOs that feel like clocking in for a second shift?

Not trying to start a doom thread, I still love this genre. But I logged in the other night, stared at my dailies list, and just... closed the launcher. Felt like opening a work email at 11pm.

I'm in my 30s now. Back in the day I'd grind for hours and it felt like play. These days a lot of the bigger MMOs have this whole checklist economy baked in: do your dailies or you fall behind, do your weeklies or you fall behind, miss the event and you fall behind the whales who didn't. At some point it stopped feeling like a game I chose and started feeling like a chore list someone else wrote for me.

And the part that gets me is the FOMO is the design. The dailies aren't there because they're fun, they're there to keep my retention number up. The shop is balanced so that not spending = falling behind. It's clever, I get why studios do it, but man it's exhausting in a way old-school grinds somehow weren't.

I honestly don't even know what I want instead. Less dailies? But then people say there's nothing to do. No power for money? But somebody's gotta pay the servers. Maybe the problem is just me getting older and having less time. Maybe I'm romanticizing 2006 me who had no job and infinite evenings.

But I keep wondering if the genre has quietly decided our time is a resource to be farmed, and we all just kind of agreed to it. Is anyone actually building around respecting players' time anymore, or is that just not how the money works? Genuinely not sure.

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 11 days ago

if you were putting together a beginner makeup bag on a budget, what would you actually spend money on first?

i feel like there's so much advice online that it's easy to end up with way more products than you need. lately i've been trying to figure out what the "core" products really are if you're starting from scratch. i've noticed a lot of people seem to mix a couple of reliable staples with cheaper products for things like blush, lip colours, liners and brushes. sheglam comes up pretty often whenever people talk about experimenting with colours without spending too much, which got me thinking about where the best value actually is. i also noticed there's a sheau10 for new users in australia at the moment, but honestly i'm more interested in how people decide where to spend and where to save. if you had a limited budget, would you put more money into base products, tools, lip products, eye makeup, or something else entirely? what ended up being worth it for you, and what turned out not to matter as much as people say?

reddit.com
u/sandip22890 — 11 days ago