Thor Ragnarok 2 Jun 2026
However, "Thor: Ragnarok 2" can refer to a few different things depending on whether you mean the movies, the comics, or other media: 1. The Movie Sequel: Thor: Love and Thunder
Thor realizes that you can’t go home again — especially when your home exploded. But you can build a new family out of misfits, rock monsters, and horse-faced aliens. Ragnarok 2 ends with Thor, Love, Korg, Valkyrie, and Beta Ray Bill flying off into a rainbow-colored wormhole, screaming “It’s Ragnarokin’ time!” Thor Ragnarok 2
If fans could build the sequel they truly want, it would take the DNA of Ragnarok —not the plot—and mutate it. Here is the dream pitch for Thor: Ragnarok 2 (working title: Thor: Kingdom of Thunder ): However, "Thor: Ragnarok 2" can refer to a
Ragnarok means "the end of all things" in Norse mythology. In the MCU, that event already happened. Asgard was destroyed. You can’t have a second "end of all things" without jumping the shark into absurdity. Ragnarok 2 ends with Thor, Love, Korg, Valkyrie,
was a 1980s neon-soaked Saturday morning cartoon, its sequel is the chaotic, sugar-crashing afternoon that follows. Thor: Love and Thunder

Thank you for sharing this insightful post. I am currently exploring Spring Boot and Quarkus, particularly in the context of streaming uploads.
In your article, you introduce the "uploadToS3" method for streaming files to S3. While this approach is technically sound, I initially interpreted it as a solution for streaming file uploads directly from the client to S3. Upon closer reading, I realized that the current implementation first uploads the file in its entirety to the Quarkus server, where it is stored on the filesystem (with the default configuration), and then streams it from disk to S3.
This method is certainly an improvement over keeping the entire file in memory. However, for optimal resource efficiency, it might be beneficial to stream the file directly from the client to the S3 bucket as the data is received.
For the benefit of future readers, a solution that enables true streaming from the client to S3 could be very valuable. I have experimented with such an approach, though I am unsure if it fully aligns with idiomatic Quarkus practices. If you are interested, I would be happy to write a short blog post about it for you to reference.