Newbie boy band B.A.P embarked on its first-ever signing tour yesterday at KT Olleh Square in Gwanghwamun, central Seoul. The six-member boy band which recently released the song “Power” to great success, signed autographs for their fans in Seoul. They will do the same today in Daegu and tomorrow in Busan.
Apart from the signing event the band held when it made its debut with the single album “Warrior” in Seoul, this is the first time the group has toured the nation to meet with fans.
“Despite their hectic schedule, the boys wanted to meet with their fans nationwide. It wasn’t easy fitting the tour in,” said a representative from TS Entertainment. Depending on the success of the events and fans’ demand, there is a chance that additional dates and regions will be added.
Online, too, is where the band is gaining popularity. Its new music video “Power” has garnered more than two million hits since being released on April 26. And according to its agency, the band members have more than 500,000 followers on Twitter between them.
Technology has altered the way people discover, evaluate, and pursue social opportunities. Many interactions that once relied on chance encounters or established social circles now begin with a search, a profile, or a message sent through a digital platform. Greater access to information has given people more control over how they connect with others, while mobile devices have made those opportunities available at almost any moment. Read more
Aviator does not behave like an old casino game moved onto a screen. It feels more like something built for the screen from the start. The plane takes off, the multiplier rises, and the player has one decision to make. Cash out now, or wait and risk the round ending before they press the button. That is the basic idea behind crash games. They strip the round down to timing. The game shows the risk in real time instead of hiding it behind a spin or a dealt card. Read more
Walk through any modern wellness expo and you’ll see a striking pattern: people aren’t just buying supplements anymore — they’re buying signals. Red light panels, PEMF mats, vagus nerve stimulators, biofeedback rings, grounding sheets. The wellness aisle has quietly become an electronics aisle. And tucked inside that shift is one of the more unusual comeback stories in alternative health: the return of Rife frequencies. Read more