instead of watching 2 hours of Netflix tonight, watch this Stanford lecture
it's the clearest explanation I've seen of how ChatGPT and Claude actually work
useful whether you've never touched AI in your life or have been using it every day for the past year
I took the key ideas and turned them into a practical guide on how to actually get 100% out of Claude
find it below
Instead of watching an hour of Netflix tonight.
This 45-minute Stanford lecture will teach you more about building companies than most founders learn in years.
Bookmark it & give it 45 minutes today. Your future self will thank you.
🚨 Anthropic just showed a 24-minute workshop on how to actually do prompts for Claude.
Taught by the people who built it.
Free. No registration. No paywall.
I've seen $300 courses that don't cover what they teach in the first 8 minutes.
Watch it and bookmark it now.
This guy literally broke down the simplest way to make money with YouTube Shorts.
Bookmark this, it might completely change how you see making money in 2026.
Here’s a full 3-hour data structures course built for real use.
I'll walk you through the core topics in a way that actually helps with technical interviews and problem solving.
So if you want a stronger foundation for interviews, LeetCode, or CS, watch this video.
CLAUDE FULL COURSE 4 HOURS
This is the most detailed Claude guide I’ve seen online.
Bookmark this before you forget.
4 hours.
Build tools.
Automate work.
Learn how people build bots and systems.
Claude → Tools → Automation → Products → Money
🚨JUST IN: Andrew Tate shares a FREE MONEY TIP for everyone at home.
“If you do this for a month, I guarantee you you’re going to have 20 to 30 fantastic business ideas.”
Speaking about the deep contradictions in human nature, Japanese actor Hiroyuki Sanada said:
“Some people dream of having a swimming pool at home, while those who have one barely use it. Those who have lost a loved one feel a profound sense of loss, while others often complain about the relatives still in their lives. Those without a partner long for one, while those who have a partner often fail to appreciate them. The hungry would give anything for a meal, while the full complain about the taste of their food. Those without a car dream of owning one, while those who have a car are always looking for a better one.
The key to happiness is gratitude—to truly see and value what we already have, and to understand that somewhere, someone would give everything for what we take for granted.”