The GOG Preservation Program has expanded with some historical polish games, along with a Polish themed sale and one of the games has me really excited. Most of the games added are free, with only one actually a paid game which is nice to see for easy access to more classics.
GOG said: “If you grew up in Poland in the late 80s or early 90s, you know Robbo. If you didn’t – you’re about to. Created by Janusz Pelc in 1989, Robbo is a puzzle-action game that became a cultural phenomenon, spawning sequels, remakes, and a fanbase that never really went away”. They’ve added three versions of Robbo:
Plus these as well:
Electro Man – a kinetic action platformer that pushed the limits of what Polish PC gaming could do.
Heartlight – a puzzle game that earned international recognition, published by Epic MegaGames.
Citadel Remonstered – a Doom-style first-person shooter initially made for Amiga. The refreshed version joins the GOG Preservation Program today.
MaSzyna – a free, open-source Polish train simulator with a devoted community that has kept it alive and evolving for years. A genuine piece of Polish gaming culture worth having in your library.
Citadel Remonstered is the one here that really excites me. I grew up playing with my Amiga 600 and Amiga 1200, and I remember discovering the original Citadel and putting lots of hours into it. Sadly, our copy of it was lost and forgotten, so to experience it again with an updated version is quite a treat – I had no idea it existed like this. Amazing.
They also have a new video interview:
They also have the Polish Promo sale running until May 8th, 7 AM UTC. Some good stuff in there to check out!
VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESS Newswire / May 1, 2026 / Snipp Interactive Inc. (“Snipp” or the “Company”) (TSXV:SPN)(OTC PINK:SNIPF), a value-added, AI-powered SaaS company delivering “Marketing Verified from Ad to Aisle,” today announced its financial results for the three months (“Q4 2025”) and the year ended December 31, 2025 (“Fiscal 2025”). All results are reported under International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) and in U.S. dollars. A copy of the complete audited consolidated financial statements and Management’s Discussion and Analysis is available on SEDAR+ at http://www.sedarplus.ca.
Fiscal 2025 was a deliberate transition year for Snipp, marked by a comprehensive brand and go-to-market repositioning around AI-powered, purchase-verified marketing; the execution of multi-year contract renewals and expansions with marquee global brands; the implementation of approximately $1.3 million of annualized run-rate operating expense reductions; and the post year-end closing, , of a CAD $4.5 million senior secured convertible debenture financing led by strategic investors, including insiders of the Company. Together with a growing bookings backlog and a stable gross margin, these actions position the Company for a meaningfully improved EBITDA trajectory in 2026 and a path to EBITDA inflection in 2027.
Conference Call
The Company will host a conference call for investors on Tuesday, May 5, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time to discuss the Company’s recent financial results and forward plans.
Webcast: https://v.ringcentral.com/join/326967294 (Meeting ID 326967294)
Dial-in (United States): +1 650 419 1505
Dial-in (Canada): +1 437 800 0918
Additional international dial-in numbers are available at https://v.ringcentral.com/teleconference using the same Meeting ID.
Fiscal 2025 Highlights
(Refer to the Non-GAAP Measures, EBITDA, Gross Margin and Bookings Backlog discussion below.)
Resilient revenue with stable margin profile. Revenue for Fiscal 2025 was $22.0 million compared with $22.7 million in 2024, a decrease of approximately 3%, reflecting moderated client campaign activity in a transitioning market, partially offset by ongoing renewals and expansion of existing customer programs.
Q4 reflects timing of campaign mix. Revenue for Q4 2025 was $5.0 million compared with $6.7 million in Q4 2024, primarily reflecting reduced campaign volumes from a small number of large clients that did not repeat short-term programs run in the prior-year period.
Gross margin held steady, with Q4 expansion. Gross margin was 61% for Fiscal 2025, consistent with 2024. Q4 2025 gross margin expanded to 65% from 62% in the prior-year period, reflecting a higher mix of high-margin platform revenue and disciplined cost controls on campaign-related expenses.
Growing forward revenue visibility. Bookings Backlog – the contracted value of signed customer agreements that are not yet recognized as revenue – increased to $18.3 million at December 31, 2025, from $17.7 million at December 31, 2024, an increase of approximately 3%.
EBITDA reflects transition-year investment. Fiscal 2025 EBITDA was negative $0.8 million compared with positive $0.7 million in Fiscal 2024. Q4 2025 EBITDA was negative $0.5 million compared with positive $0.6 million in Q4 2024. The year-over-year decline reflects lower revenue and continued investment in the Company’s platform and brand, partially offset by a meaningful reduction in share-based compensation.
Solid balance sheet, strengthened post year-end. Cash at December 31, 2025 was $3.4 million with accounts receivable of $1.7 million. Subsequent to year-end, the Company closed a CAD $4.5 million non-brokered private placement of senior secured convertible debentures led by strategic investors and insiders, to support growth initiatives, working capital, and continued investment in AI capabilities.
$1.3 million of annualized run-rate cost actions implemented; further actions underway. Between October 2025 and the date of this release, the Company implemented approximately $1.3 million of annualized run-rate operating expense reductions, with additional actions planned for the second half of 2026 as engineering delivery is progressively consolidated into the Company’s lower-cost India hub.
Strategic and Commercial Highlights
New brand and market positioning. In March 2026, the Company launched a refreshed brand identity anchored by the “Marketing Verified from Ad to Aisle” tagline, reflecting Snipp’s evolution into an AI-powered SaaS platform connecting marketing investment to verified, SKU-level purchase outcomes for the world’s leading consumer brands.
Largest contract in Snipp’s history. In March 2026, the Company secured a US $3.0 million, two-year contract extension with an existing marquee client in the pet-care sector – the largest single contract in Snipp’s history – expanding a previously successful loyalty program through 2027.
Multi-year renewals and expansions. The Company executed a US $1.4 million two-year extension with a leading pet-care brand, and, subsequent to year-end, entered into a new US $1.3 million multi-year agreement extending a major FMCG client relationship through September 2028.
New enterprise wins. In November 2025, the Company secured a US $576,850 agreement with a multinational food manufacturer for purchase-based promotional programs, and a US $745,560 contract to build and manage a new professional-focused loyalty program for a global pet-care brand.
Financial Media Network expansion. Subsequent to year-end, Snipp announced an industry-first partnership with Inmar Intelligence to integrate digital grocery incentives into the SnippMEDIA Financial Media Network (“FMN”), which provides access to more than 60 million U.S. banking customers through marquee financial institutions.
Industry thought leadership. In March 2026, the Company released its 2026 AI Shopper Marketing Technology Landscape, a comprehensive industry map of the platforms transforming how brands engage shoppers and drive measurable sales, reinforcing Snipp’s positioning at the centre of the AI-powered shopper marketing ecosystem.
Management Commentary
“2025 was the year we deliberately repositioned Snipp around the future of marketing technology – verified, AI-powered, purchase-anchored, and increasingly recurring,” said Atul Sabharwal, Founder and Chief Executive Officer. “We refreshed our brand, signed the largest contract in our history, executed meaningful multi-year renewals with global brands, removed approximately $1.3 million of annualized run-rate cost from the business, and strengthened our balance sheet with a CAD $4.5 million strategic financing. Our gross margin held steady at 61% for the year and expanded to 65% in the fourth quarter, our bookings backlog grew to $18.3 million, and our SnippMEDIA Financial Media Network is being re-platformed to capture a long-duration opportunity. We enter 2026 with sharper focus, a stronger contracted revenue base, a leaner cost structure, and a clear path towards EBITDA inflection in 2027.”
Non-GAAP Measures
Snipp uses certain performance measures throughout this document that are not recognized under Canadian generally accepted accounting principles or IFRS (“GAAP”), including Gross Margin, EBITDA, and Bookings Backlog. Management believes that these measures provide supplemental financial information that is useful in evaluating the Company’s operations. Investors should be cautioned, however, that these measures should not be construed as alternatives to measures determined in accordance with GAAP or IFRS as an indicator of Snipp’s performance. The Company’s method of calculating these measures may differ from that of other organizations, and accordingly, these measures may not be comparable.
EBITDA. Snipp defines earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (“EBITDA”) as revenue minus operating expenses, excluding non-cash operating expenses consisting of share-based payments, depreciation and amortization. Interest and taxes are not included in the Company’s operating expenses.
Gross Margin. Snipp defines Gross Margin as revenue less campaign infrastructure costs.
Bookings Backlog. Snipp defines Bookings Backlog as the total contracted value of signed customer agreements less revenue recognized to date under those contracts. Bookings translate into revenue based on IFRS principles, and Bookings Backlog reflects the portion of contracted revenue expected to be recognized in future periods.
EBITDA Reconciliation
(USD)
Q4 2025
Q4 2024
FY 2025
FY 2024
Operating income (loss)
(787,391
)
149,426
(2,281,147
)
(1,341,637
)
Amortization of intangibles
301,970
267,899
1,156,548
1,055,100
Depreciation of equipment
5,438
3,525
17,319
12,964
Share-based payments
25,115
161,778
275,830
977,067
EBITDA
(454,868
)
582,628
(831,450
)
703,494
Gross Margin
(USD)
Q4 2025
Q4 2024
FY 2025
FY 2024
Revenue
4,978,650
6,665,316
22,010,996
22,731,706
Less: Campaign infrastructure
(1,734,239
)
(2,509,241
)
(8,690,646
)
(8,877,210
)
Gross Margin
3,244,411
4,156,075
13,320,350
13,854,496
Gross Margin %
65
%
62
%
61
%
61
%
About Snipp
Snipp Interactive Inc. (TSXV:SPN)(OTC PINK:SNIPF) is a leading AI-powered technology provider in the global loyalty and promotions sector. Snipp helps brands drive actions, prove performance, and unlock insights across consumer and channel marketing strategies by connecting promotions, sweepstakes, instant wins, contests, offers, rebates, rewards, loyalty, and media programs directly to verified purchases and other brand specified activities.
Snipp’s modular platform enables Fortune 500 brands, agencies, and partners to run both short-term and always-on programs at scale, transforming engagement into proven outcomes and owned first-party intelligence that powers meaningful, measurable growth. Snipp’s AI-powered receipt and transaction validation capabilities have become an industry standard, enabling accurate, retailer-agnostic measurement.
Snipp is headquartered in Vancouver, Canada with a presence across the United States, Canada, Ireland, Europe, and India. Snipp is publicly listed on the TSX Venture Exchange in Canada and is also quoted on the OTC Pink marketplace under the symbol SNIPF. For more information, visit Snipp’s website at http://www.snipp.com and its profile on SEDAR+ at http://www.sedarplus.ca.
For Further Information, Please ContactSnipp Interactive Inc.Malcolm Davidson, Chief Financial Officer (Interim)[email protected] | 1-888-99-SNIPP
This press release contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties which may cause actual results to differ materially. When used in this document, the words “may,” “would,” “could,” “will,” “intend,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “expect,” and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements in this release include, without limitation, statements regarding the Company’s expectations for revenue and EBITDA trajectory in 2026 and 2027; the anticipated benefits and timing of cost-control measures; the expansion and re-platforming of the SnippMEDIA Financial Media Network; the expected conversion of bookings backlog into recognized revenue; and the Company’s strategic and commercial plans. Such statements reflect the Company’s current views with respect to future events and are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied, including those factors discussed in filings made by the Company with the Canadian securities regulatory authorities. There can be no assurance that the anticipated cost savings, EBITDA improvements, contract conversions, or growth initiatives will be realized in the amounts or on the timelines described. The Company does not intend, and assumes no obligation, to update these forward-looking statements, except as required by law. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such statements.
Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.
Copyright Snipp Interactive Inc. All rights reserved. All other trademarks and trade names are the property of their respective owners.
SOURCE: Snipp Interactive Inc.
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Published: April 30, 2026 at 11:50 pm Updated: April 30, 2026 at 10:16 am
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Alright, April 2026 is coming to a close, and here we are with another portion of monthly blockchain buzz. This month basically sorted itself into three buckets. The first was the ugly but entirely necessary stress test — major exploits that forced the whole industry to reckon with uncomfortable truths. The second was genuine infrastructure progress, the kind where code actually shipped to mainnet and the receipts were verifiable. And the third was made up of commercial distribution moves that matter strategically, even if their full payoff is still sitting somewhere over the horizon.
Here’s how it all played out on the ground, and what we suspect it means once the calendar flips forward.
On April 1st, Drift Protocol got hit by something far more unsettling than a clever smart-contract bug or a single-click flash-loan exploit. This was the culmination of a six-month social-engineering operation, one that investigators later linked with medium-high confidence to North Korean actors, and that’s the detail that makes the whole thing stick in your mind long after the headlines fade. It wasn’t a coding mistake another team could patch away with an audit and a collective sigh of relief — it was a patient, human-layer compromise built around multisig operations and pre-signed authorizations, and the implications of that are still rippling across the industry. By mid-April, Drift had scrambled together a recovery package worth up to 127.5 million, but the damage to its total value locked was already stark: it cratered from around 550 million to somewhere near $225 million in a matter of days. We suspect this will become the case study every protocol ops team studies obsessively for the next year, not because the code was broken, but because the humans around the code were.
Then, as if the month hadn’t already delivered enough cold water, Kelp DAO suffered a roughly 292 million bridge exploit on April 18th, and this one got messy almost immediately in ways that extended well beyond Kelp itself. The consequences spilled into Aave — where bad-debt scenarios started looking uncomfortably plausible — ignited an ugly blame game with LayerZero over single-DVN configuration choices, and ultimately saw around 71 million frozen on Arbitrum as the dust began to settle. The broader DeFi ecosystem sagged to a one-year low in total value locked around this time, and while Kelp wasn’t the only reason for the drawdown, it certainly poured fuel on a fire that was already smoldering. The big takeaway for us here is architectural, and it’s one we’ll be debating all year: modular cross-chain security sounds elegant in a whitepaper, but it’s only as strong as the specific way an application chooses to configure its security assumptions. Get that wrong, and the abstraction layer becomes a liability.
If the exploits were the month’s stress test, then TON and Base were the answers coming from teams that were actually shipping.
TON’s Catchain 2.0 upgrade going live on mainnet is the kind of development that’s easy to overlook if you’re just skimming headlines. “Sub-second finality” — great, another chain claiming to be fast, what else is new? But the details here genuinely matter, and they reward a closer look. Block times dropped to roughly 400 milliseconds, and user-perceived finality settled around one second, which is a dramatic leap from the ten seconds the network was working with before. That’s not just a benchmark number that looks nice in a comparison chart; it fundamentally changes the user experience for an ecosystem that’s tied to Telegram’s massive mini-app footprint, where snappy interactions are table stakes. The trade-off, as you’d expect, is higher inflation — climbing to roughly 3.6% from the previous 0.6% — because faster block production means higher validator rewards, and someone has to pay for that speed. The market seemed to absorb the nuance reasonably well, with TON up slightly on the news and volume moving more than 35% higher on the day. But the real test is still ahead: the chain is fast now, but wallets, indexers, and applications all need to adopt the streaming stack TON documented if that speed is going to translate into something users actually feel. The infrastructure is there; the ecosystem now has to catch up.
Then there’s Base, which pushed its Azul upgrade to testnet on April 22nd, and we think this one deserves a fair bit more attention than it got in the broader conversation. Base framed Azul as the network’s first truly independent upgrade, centered on multiproofs, client-stack consolidation, and a credible path toward Stage 2 decentralisation — the kind of framing that could easily feel like marketing fluff if the operational numbers didn’t back it up. But they did. Over the preceding two months, the network had reduced empty blocks by roughly 99%, from about 200 per day down to around 2, while sustaining multiple bursts of 5,000 transactions per second. With close to 5 billion in stablecoin market cap and roughly 4.4 billion in DeFi total value locked, Base is clearly playing in a different league now than it was even a year ago. The caveat worth keeping in mind is that this is all still on testnet, with mainnet activation scheduled for later, so we’re looking at a credible promise rather than a delivered product just yet. But the substance here is notably high, and it’s refreshing to see a major L2 tie its decentralisation story to specific engineering changes rather than leaving it floating in the realm of brand narrative.
World — the project formerly known as Worldcoin — had an oddly structured but genuinely interesting April, one that split the market’s reaction into two distinct waves. On the 10th, the team announced that the WLD token unlock rate would fall by 43% starting in July, and the market liked what it heard, sending the token up nearly 3% on what amounted to a tokenomics cleanup. Then on the 17th, they unveiled what they described as the biggest World ID upgrade in the protocol’s history: a full-stack proof-of-human architecture, a dedicated application, and a surprisingly broad spread of consumer and enterprise integrations. And the market, in one of those reversals that makes you remember how unpredictable these things can be, sold the news — WLD dropped about 10%.
We think the market got the short-term reaction directionally right, but it might be undervaluing the substance of what was actually announced. The partner names that surfaced during the rollout — Tinder, Zoom, Docusign — suggest that World is genuinely moving beyond the old “Orb plus token” framing into something that looks more like a full identity-and-attestation stack with real distribution potential. With nearly 18 million verified humans across 160 countries, the network effects are starting to look meaningful rather than merely theoretical. The open question, and it’s a big one, is whether these integrations translate into durable user behavior and whether the regulatory and product adoption hurdles can be cleared without tripping over privacy concerns that have dogged the project since its earliest days. Execution risk here is real and non-trivial, but this was still one of April’s highest-substance consumer stories, and We’d keep it on a short watchlist.
Securitize integrating with TRON is precisely the kind of announcement that sounds enormous when you read the press release — tokenized real-world assets arriving on a chain with more than 373 million accounts, roughly 26 billion in total value locked , and north of 7.9 trillion in annual transfer volume — but the market barely bothered to shrug. TRX moved maybe 1% over the two days following the news, and that feels about right for where things stand today. The integration is real and commercially meaningful, and the distribution logic makes sense when you think about TRON’s dominance in stablecoin transfer volumes and its deep footprint in markets where access to tokenized securities could genuinely matter. But until we see actual new real-world asset products launching on TRON through this partnership, the announcement sits in that familiar zone of strategically important but not yet catalytic. The impact case is strongest over a medium horizon, and we suspect we’ll look back on this as an early signal rather than an event.
XRPL’s April narrative, by contrast, was unusually coherent for a project that has sometimes struggled to communicate a single clear story. The month opened with attention coalescing around zero-knowledge proof support for private, auditable institutional transactions around April 14th, and then Ripple followed up on the 20th with a formal post-quantum readiness roadmap that targets full readiness by 2028.
That combination — practical privacy for institutional use cases paired with a serious, staged approach to quantum security — gave XRP one of the cleaner “serious infrastructure” narratives of the entire month. XRP was trading around $1.44 as the quantum story gained wider traction, and while precise event-window data was a bit fuzzy, the direction of travel was clearly positive. The roadmap itself matters not because a 2028 target date is imminent, but because it commits Ripple and the XRPL community to a structured process of validator testing and contingency planning rather than leaving quantum risk as an abstract threat to be worried about someday. It’s still early, and the technology still needs to ship, but the credibility here stems from the fact that the roadmap exists at all in concrete form.
Polymarket’s April was a fascinating blend of genuine product work and the kind of speculative attention that tends to swirl around anything touching prediction markets these days. On the product side, the team announced a full exchange-stack overhaul on April 6th — new contracts, a rebuilt order book, and a USDC-backed collateral token called pUSD — and the migration docs and changelog that followed during the month made it clear this was a substantial rebuild rather than a cosmetic refresh. On the attention side, Bloomberg reported that the company was in talks to raise an additional 400 million at a15 billion valuation, while the Guardian pegged recent weekly trading volume above $1 billion, and suddenly the whole story had a different kind of gravity.
There’s no liquid native token here, so none of the usual price signals apply, and you’re left weighing the structural story against the reality that valuation chatter and narrative momentum can sometimes move faster than product rollout. Prediction markets are clearly becoming a serious fintech category rather than a crypto curiosity, and Polymarket is the name most people associate with that transition, but the gap between “dominant platform in a growing category” and “business that justifies a $15 billion price tag” is still wide enough to require some careful thought. We’d put Polymarket in the same bucket as Securitize-on-TRON: too meaningful to ignore, genuinely substantive in parts, but still dependent on the months ahead to prove that the attention reflects durable adoption rather than a strong headline cycle.
If we had to bet on which of April’s stories will still feel relevant when the leaves start turning in the autumn, the highest-confidence positive names would be TON, Base, and World. Each shipped something tangible, each has a credible path to visible user-facing impact, and each backed up its announcements with enough operational detail that you could trace the line from press release to actual protocol change without having to squint too hard. On the cautionary side, Drift and Kelp DAO rewrote the threat model for protocols in ways that go beyond simple smart-contract risk, and we doubt we’re done seeing the ripple effects of either incident — the conversations they’ve started about human-layer security and cross-chain configuration are only just beginning.
Polymarket and Securitize-on-TRON sit in a tier that deserves close watching but stops short of full confidence. Both made moves that were too strategically meaningful to dismiss, but both still need post-April execution to prove that the attention they gathered was the start of something durable rather than a well-timed burst of headlines. April 2026 felt, more than most months, like a moment when a simple filter actually worked: if a story changed protocol risk, throughput, distribution, or verified user counts, it mattered. If it was just vibes, it faded. We wish more months worked that cleanly.
Disclaimer
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About The Author
Alisa, a dedicated journalist at the MPost, specializes in crypto, AI, investments, and the expansive realm of Web3. With a keen eye for emerging trends and technologies, she delivers comprehensive coverage to inform and engage readers in the ever-evolving landscape of digital finance.
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Alisa, a dedicated journalist at the MPost, specializes in crypto, AI, investments, and the expansive realm of Web3. With a keen eye for emerging trends and technologies, she delivers comprehensive coverage to inform and engage readers in the ever-evolving landscape of digital finance.
Recent advancements in artificial intelligence and robotics are accelerating the development of humanoid robots, bringing them out of the lab and into real-world applications. One of the most capable and accessible models available today, the Unitree G1 developed by Chinese firm Unitree Robotics, is officially stepping into the field.
While it might not be the absolute most advanced model on the market, its relatively low cost makes it highly practical for real-world deployment. The latest example comes from Japan: Japan Airlines has launched a new pilot program at Tokyo’s Haneda Airport—one of the country’s busiest hubs—to deploy these humanoid robots directly on the tarmac.
Humanoids Teaming Up with Ground Crews
Starting next month, Unitree G1 robots will work alongside human ground handling teams to assist with baggage and cargo operations. The pilot project is slated to run until 2028, with the potential to become a permanent operational standard if successful.
The primary driving force behind this initiative is Japan’s shrinking workforce. Faced with one of the world’s oldest populations and a rapidly growing influx of tourists, the country is grappling with significant labor shortages, particularly in physically demanding aviation roles.
In recent operational demonstrations, the G1 was seen carefully pushing cargo onto a conveyor belt next to a Japan Airlines aircraft before signaling a human worker with a hand gesture. This simple yet crucial interaction highlights how seamless human-robot coordination can function in a live, fast-paced environment. Japan Airlines officials note that assigning repetitive and physically strenuous tasks to robots will alleviate the heavy burden on human employees. However, they emphasize that critical responsibilities, especially safety oversight, will remain strictly under human control.
The project will initially involve a detailed analysis of ground operations, followed by extensive performance evaluations of the robots through both digital simulations and real-world testing.
Unitree G1 Specifications and Capabilities
Despite its compact design, the Unitree G1 packs impressive hardware suited for industrial assistance:
Dimensions: Stands roughly 1.32 meters tall and weighs just 35 kilograms.Agility: Features 23 degrees of freedom, allowing for highly balanced and coordinated movement.Sensors: Equipped with 3D LiDAR, a depth camera, and voice command systems for spatial awareness and team interaction.Performance: Powered by a 9000 mAh battery that provides around two hours of continuous operation, with a top speed of 7.2 km/h.
These technical specifications enable the G1 to successfully execute physical labor while safely navigating around heavy machinery and human personnel.
The Secret: From Simulation to Reality
A major reason the G1 is ready for immediate deployment is Unitree’s sophisticated training methodology. Before handling real luggage, the robot’s capabilities are extensively honed in advanced virtual environments like the Nvidia Isaac Simulator.
During this phase, a digital twin of the robot is created. Human movements are captured via motion tracking and transferred to the 3D model, where reinforcement learning techniques optimize the actions. Finally, using a method called “Sim2Real,” these learned behaviors and physics adjustments are directly transferred to the physical robot’s brain. This rigorous pipeline ensures that the Unitree G1 operates with maximum stability and reliability when faced with the unpredictable variables of the real world.
Hip Hop Hotties Cherish ‘Memba Them?! ‘Do It To It!’
Published
April 30, 2026
2:53 PM PDT
Girl group Cherish — made up of sisters Farrah King, Felisha King, Fallon King, and Neosha King — were in their late teens and early 20s when their hit song “Do It To It” dropped back in 2006.
The bop peaked at Number 12 on the Billboard Hot 100 and reached Number 10 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.
“Bounce wit’ it, drop wit’ it. Lean wit’ it, rock wit’ it. Snap wit’ it. All my ladies pop yo’ backs wit’ it!”
Mistral Medium 3.5 is a 128 billion parameter dense model priced at $1.50 input / $7.50 output per million tokens, far above comparable Chinese alternatives.
Chinese open-source models—Qwen, GLM, MiMo-V2—dominate the leaderboard top, leaving Mistral as a lonely Western holdout.
Mistral is positioning the release as a building block toward a future large flagship model.
Mistral AI dropped Mistral Medium 3.5 on April 29. The Paris-based lab announced a dense 128-billion-parameter model, a set of agentic features—and walked straight into a wall of online “meh” reactions.
The release came in three parts. First, the model itself. Second, remote coding agents via Mistral Vibe CLI—cloud-based coding sessions that can push pull requests to GitHub and run in parallel without you sitting at a terminal. Third, Work Mode in Le Chat, Mistral’s ChatGPT-style consumer interface, which now handles multi-step autonomous tasks like email triage, research synthesis, and cross-tool workflows.
Big ambitions, but a messy benchmark reality.
Medium 3.5 scores 77.6% on SWE-Bench Verified—a coding benchmark that tests whether a model can fix real GitHub issues by generating working patches. It also hits 91.4% on τ³-Telecom, which measures agentic tool use in specialized environments. Mistral also merged three previously separate models (Medium 3.1, Magistral, and Devstral 2) into one set of weights with configurable reasoning effort per request.
Unified model replacing three is a real engineering win. The problem is what it costs and who it’s up against.
Mistral charges $1.50 per million input tokens and $7.50 per million output tokens. Alibaba’s Qwen 3.6 at 27 billion parameters—less than a quarter of Medium 3.5’s parameter count—scores 72.4% on the same SWE-Bench Verified benchmark and ships under Apache 2.0, meaning you can download and run it for free.
Did you know?
Parameters are what determine an AI’s capacity to learn, reason, and store information. The more parameters, the wider the model’s breadth of knowledge.
Scroll through the open-source leaderboards and the picture is stark. The top spots belong to Alibaba’s Qwen, GLM from China’s Zhipu AI, and MiMo-V2 from Xiaomi, all of them cheaper, more powerful and competitive than Mistral’s new release. Medium 3.5 hasn’t even ranked on major independent leaderboards yet—third-party evaluations are still pending.
The only good thing though, as some argue, is that Mistral is, at this point, the lone non-Chinese model with any serious presence in the open-source conversation.
I think Mistral has the 10th highest valuation in the whole AI scene (something like that).
All while they consistently release some of the worst models.
They have survived through European bureaucracy, lobbying and politics.
All because they’ve convinced demented bureaucrat… https://t.co/kh7ASvdi7C
— Youssof Altoukhi (@Youssofal_) April 29, 2026
The Internet reacts
Pedro Domingos, a machine learning professor at the University of Washington, wasn’t gentle:
“Regular AI companies brag about how much better their model is on benchmarks. Only Mistral brags about how much worse its one is.”
Regular AI companies brag about how much better their model is on benchmarks. Only Mistral brags about how much worse its one is. pic.twitter.com/WcAKskaVpL
— Pedro Domingos (@pmddomingos) April 30, 2026
He followed up with a sharper question: “I don’t know what’s worse, for Europe to not be in the AI race or for it to be represented by a laughingstock like Mistral.”
Youssof Altoukhi, founder of Yoyo Studios, did the math: Qwen 3.6, at 27 billion parameters, is 4.7 times smaller than Medium 3.5 and scores comparably on coding. Medium 3.5’s output pricing puts it alongside closed models that score significantly higher on every major benchmark.
“If it wasn’t for their political skill they would have been bankrupt by now,” he said.
Not everyone was purely dismissive. AI developer Michal Langmajer captured the ambivalence:
“I’m genuinely glad there’s still a non-US, non-Chinese lab trying to build frontier LLMs but boy we have to level up the game in Europe. Their new flagship model is basically ‘not the best’ on any benchmark, yet costs multiple times more than most competitors.”
I’m genuinely glad there’s still a non-US, non-Chinese lab trying to build frontier LLMs (@MistralAI) but boy we have to level up the game in Europe.
Their new flagship model is basically “not the best” on any benchmark, yet costs multiple times more than most competitors… pic.twitter.com/JwvR5eKWmT
— Michal Langmajer (@MichalLangmajer) April 30, 2026
Some developers argued open weights are a durability play, not a leaderboard play. A model anyone can download, fine-tune, and self-host doesn’t need to win rankings today to stay relevant. Others pointed to Mistral’s real enterprise deployments across Europe as evidence the moat isn’t purely technical.
The Geopolitical safety net
This is where Mistral’s actual pitch lives.
European enterprises under GDPR, banks handling sensitive customer data, and governments that won’t route AI workloads through Chinese infrastructure have limited options. As Decrypt reported last December, HSBC signed a multi-year deal with Mistral specifically to self-host models on its own infrastructure. The appeal of an EU-headquartered open-weight lab with a $14 billion valuation doesn’t show up in benchmark tables—but it shows up in procurement decisions.
Not the best at coding, and not the cheapest. But it is: not American, not Chinese, auditable, self-hostable, and legally safe for European enterprise.
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Barack Obama has been married to wife Michelle Obama for nearly 34 years.
Despite that long and successful union, the official X (formerly Twitter) account of the Republican Party suggested today that the former president is secretly gay.
The bizarre situation began on Thursday morning when Congresswoman Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez was asked about the likelihood that the US will one day elect a gay president.
“What do you think we’re going to have first: Are we going to have a female president first, or a gay president?” TMZ asked the representative from New York.
“Well, we don’t know if we’ve already had a gay president, to be honest with you,” Ocasio-Cortez astutely pointed out.
“I think there are chances that maybe we have, I dunno.”
There are several presidents who historians believe might have had homosexual tendencies, including James Buchanan and Abraham Lincoln.
(Yes, we might have had two gay presidents in a row!)
But sensing the opportunity to take a jab at a rival politician, the folks who run the GOP’s account decided to hint — with the tweet above — that Obama was the gay prez.
Not surprisingly, X users from across the ideological spectrum were quick to call out the immaturity and homophobia of the tweet.
But the attempt at humor backfired in other ways as well, with many commenters pointing out some of the tendencies of the current White House resident.
“The current president is obsessed with opera, musicals, and interior design,” one user wrote.
“My bet is with the makeup wearing, show tune loving, interior design obsessed felon,” another added.
“Funny. At least he’s no pedo like Donald. You are the party who protect pedophiles,” a third chimed in.
Yeah, that probably wasn’t the sort of reply the GOP was expecting, but it’s certainly the kind they deserved.
We suppose if we were looking for a bright side here, we might be inclined to point out that at least the tweet was slightly less offensive than the racist Obama meme Trump shared back in February.
Hopefully, we’ll eventually return to a time when politicians and the folks who communicate on behalf of parties behaved like grown-ups. But probably not.
Coronation Street is hurtling towards its huge murder reveal, and after tonight’s dramatic episode, all eyes are on Megan. With tensions exploding and enemies piling up, she’s now looking like the one in the most danger.
After a chaotic series of confrontations, the big question is no longer just who dies, but whether Megan has finally pushed things too far.
Megan received a nasty punch to the face (Credit: ITV)
Megan attacked as tensions explode in Coronation Street
Thursday’s episode saw Megan dragged into the back of the bistro van by Eva, Toyah and Leanne, who were determined to force a confession out of her.
But instead of backing down, Megan turned the tables, throwing accusations of her own and bringing up Imran’s death. The revelation sparked fury, especially for Toyah, who lashed out and punched Megan, leaving her bruised and shaken.
Later, Megan crossed paths with Daniel and headed back to Ken’s to clean herself up. But things quickly became tense when Daniel turned on her, only for Ken to walk in and assume the worst about what had happened.
Megan and Maggie had it out (Credit: ITV)
Megan takes on Maggie in explosive Coronation Street showdown
Elsewhere, secrets were bubbling over as Melanie blackmailed Maggie, threatening to expose her role in her husband Alan’s death.
Unbeknown to them, Megan was listening in and recorded the entire exchange, giving her leverage.
Armed with that information, Megan confronted Maggie at the precinct flats. The clash quickly turned physical, and although Megan initially walked away, Maggie wasn’t prepared to leave it there, following her with clear intent.
Megan could meet her maker on Friday (Credit: ITV)
Is Megan the Coronation Street murder victim?
Heading into the final episode of the week, Megan has firmly emerged as one of the leading candidates in the flashforward murder mystery.
Earlier in the week, attention was on other potential victims, but after tonight’s events, the spotlight has shifted.
If Megan is the one who dies, there is certainly no shortage of suspects.
Maggie wants to make Megan pay (Credit: ITV)
1. Maggie Driscoll
Maggie has every reason to want Megan gone. Not only has Megan groomed her grandson, she is now holding damaging information over her. With a history of going to extreme lengths, Maggie could be pushed too far.
Ben is angry about everything that’s gone on (Credit: ITV)
2. Ben Driscoll
Ben has kept a low profile, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t capable of acting. With everything that’s happened, he may be biding his time before taking revenge.
Eva has failed to get hard evidence on Megan (Credit: ITV)
3. Eva Price
Eva has been relentless in trying to expose Megan, even putting herself at risk in the process. With pressure mounting, could she take things a step further?
Toyah walloped Megan but will she go one step further? (Credit: ITV)
4. Toyah Battersby
After already lashing out physically, Toyah’s behaviour has raised questions. Her earlier comments suggest there could be more going on beneath the surface.
Daniel is a wreck over what Megan did (Credit: ITV)
5. Daniel Osbourne
Daniel has his own history and plenty of motive. After everything Megan has put him through, he could be driven to act.
Melanie wants to keep her son safe (Credit: ITV)
6. Melanie
Melanie’s sudden arrival and determination to protect her son adds another layer to the mystery. If pushed, she could be capable of anything.
With so many suspects circling and tensions at boiling point, Megan’s fate hangs in the balance. But whether she really is the victim will only be revealed when the episode airs.
Read more: Coronation Street next week: First look as murder week aftermath begins
Coronation Street usually airs weeknights on ITV at 8.30pm, with an early release on ITVX at 7am.
Leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know what you think!
Dawn Fletcher has finally seen the truth in Emmerdale and there’s no going back now, setting up her exit. After weeks of lies and manipulation, she knows exactly what Joe Tate has done and she’s ready to make him pay.
With reports that actress Olivia Bromley is leaving the soap, this explosive new storyline could be the beginning of Dawn’s dramatic exit.
Dawn wanted answers so Moira revealed what Joe did in Emmerdale (Credit: ITV)
Dawn uncovers the truth about Joe in Emmerdale
Joe has spent weeks denying the accusations against him, despite viewers knowing he’s guilty. The tension reached its peak when Moira confronted him with a shotgun.
Dawn arrived just in time, revealing she was pregnant and begging Moira not to pull the trigger. Moira backed down, but made it clear Joe would face consequences.
Those consequences now seem closer than ever.
After another run-in with Moira on Thursday (April 30), Dawn finally pushed for answers. When Moira revealed everything, the truth clicked into place and Dawn realised she had been lied to all along.
She later confronted Joe, but he stuck to his story, even swearing on her life that he was telling the truth.
Dawn means business (Credit: ITV)
Moira, Cain and Dawn form a dangerous plan
Meeting secretly with Moira and Cain, Dawn was left devastated but determined.
“I want to make him pay,” she admitted, though she was torn over what to do next. With a baby on the way and Joe’s influence looming, she felt trapped.
Cain suggested she get rid of the baby, but Dawn made it clear that wasn’t an option.
“I can’t stay, I can’t go and I don’t know what to do,” she said.
Moira urged her to return home and act as though nothing had changed. Her advice was clear: stay close, play the long game and hit Joe where it hurts most.
“Take him for all you can get, every penny. If you break his heart at the same time, all the better.”
But Moira warned that once they started, there would be no turning back.
Dawn made her choice: “Joe and I are over, I’ll do it. I’m in.”
Will Dawn leave Joe with nothing? (Credit: ITV)
Is this Dawn’s exit storyline as Olivia Bromley set to depart Emmerdale?
With news that Olivia Bromley is set to leave after eight years, the timing of this storyline feels significant.
Her final scenes are expected to air later this summer, with the groundwork already being laid.
It looks increasingly likely that Dawn will take everything she can from Joe before making a clean break. But what that means for her future remains unclear.
Will she cut ties with the Tates completely? And if she does leave, will she have to stay hidden from them for good?
One thing is certain. With Moira and Cain backing her, Dawn is preparing to hit Joe where it hurts and it could change everything before she goes.
Read more: Emmerdale cast shake-up 2026 as exits confirmed and big returns teased – so who’s leaving?
Emmerdale usually airs weeknights on ITV at 8pm, with an early release on ITVX at 7am.
Leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know what you think!
Elon Musk said in court that most cryptocurrencies are scams during the ongoing OpenAI lawsuit in Oakland.
The comment came up while discussing OpenAI’s early idea of raising funds through an ICO, a crypto-based fundraising method.
Musk’s statement adds to the wider dispute with OpenAI over its mission shift and reflects his changing views on crypto over time.
Following the ongoing court case between AI firm OpenAI and Elon Musk, the tech billionaire said in court that most cryptocurrencies are scams.
The statement came up when he was asked about crypto in connection with OpenAI’s early idea of using an Initial Coin Offering (ICO) to raise money. Musk replied that “some of them have merit, but most of them are scams,” according to an X post from New York Times reporter Mike Isaac.
Elon Musk explaining what cryptocurrency is to the jury: “Some of them have merit, but most of them are scams.”
this is responding to early emails where OpenAI discussed holding an ICO, or initial coin offering, in order to fund the company.
(back then, ICOs were en vogue…)
— rat king 🐀 (@MikeIsaac) April 29, 2026
He made the statement as the case proceeded into the third day of trial at a courthouse in Oakland.
What the dispute is about
This case represents a long-running dispute between Musk and OpenAI, a company he helped to start in 2015. Musk is suing OpenAI, alleging it moved away from its original purpose as a nonprofit group focused on building safe artificial intelligence for public benefit. He argues that the company changed direction after partnering with Microsoft and began building and selling commercial AI products.
The discussion brought cryptocurrency into the case, particularly regarding how OpenAI initially considered raising funds and how its structure evolved.
In court, Musk described the shift as OpenAI having “[stolen] a charity.” OpenAI has rejected this claim, stating that Musk was aware from the beginning that it could grow and change into a for-profit model. The company also said he knew about early funding ideas, including a potential ICO, which would have allowed the project to raise money by selling digital tokens to the public.
What is an ICO
An Initial Coin Offering (ICO) is used widely in the crypto space, where new projects create tokens and sell them to raise funds.
This approach became widely used in the late 2010s but is also associated with failed projects that raised funds and later collapsed, leaving investors with losses. This context partly explains why Musk’s comment in court drew attention, as he linked the broader crypto market to risks and fraud concerns.
Musk’s relationship with crypto
Musk has had a strong relationship with cryptocurrency over the years. During the 2020-2021 crypto boom, he was among the prominent supporters of digital assets. His company, Tesla, invested about $1.5 billion in Bitcoin in 2021 and briefly accepted Bitcoin as payment.
He also influenced interest in Dogecoin through social media posts, contributing to significant price movements at the time.
However, Tesla later reduced its exposure to Bitcoin by selling about 75% of its holdings in 2022. According to a recent filing, the company still holds 11,509 Bitcoin, valued at about $786 million after a $222 million markdown in early 2026.
These coins were originally purchased for about $386 million in 2021, meaning that the investment still gained value overall despite market swings.
Musk’s recent comments suggest a more critical view of the broader crypto sector, though they were made within the context of the ongoing legal dispute with OpenAI.
Also Read: “We’re in Red Zone”: Sen. Tim Scott Signals Clarity Act Nearing Vote
Disclaimer: The information researched and reported by The Crypto Times is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional financial advice. Investing in crypto assets involves significant risk due to market volatility. Always Do Your Own Research (DYOR) and consult with a qualified Financial Advisor before making any investment decisions.
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