Everything you need to master Claude Code is free, and sitting on the internet right now. ๐จ
Most people will never find these. So I pulled together the 5 that actually matter:
๐. ๐๐๐๐๐๐.๐ฆ๐
The one file that gives Claude memory. Drop it in your project root and it reads it at the start of every session. No more re-explaining your stack, your decisions, or your preferences every single time.
๐ https://t.co/mEWPJgAWen
๐. ๐๐ค๐ข๐ฅ๐ฅ๐ฌ
Teach Claude a reusable workflow once, and it repeats it forever. You build it one time, Claude runs it on demand.
๐ https://t.co/pPmPoDBEHh
๐. ๐๐๐
Connect Claude to Slack, GitHub, and Google Drive in one setup. This is the piece that turns Claude from a chatbot into a tool that actually works inside your stack.
๐ https://t.co/CSmAlqqPcT
๐. ๐๐จ๐ฎ๐ญ๐ข๐ง๐๐ฌ
Automate tasks to run 24/7 without you touching anything. Hand Claude a recurring job, it runs on schedule, and you wake up to finished work.
๐ https://t.co/Bmv0QM7A64
๐. ๐๐ฅ๐๐ฎ๐๐ ๐๐จ๐๐ ๐๐ฅ๐ญ๐ข๐ฆ๐๐ญ๐ ๐๐ฎ๐ข๐๐
The best community-built resource for everything else, hooks, plugins, advanced workflows, all in one repo.
๐ https://t.co/9mlV47YY7j
All 5 are free. All 5 are live right now.
The people who learn this stack today will look back in 18 months at everyone who didn't the way founders look at people who refused to use the internet in 2001.
Save this post. You'll come back to it.
A Director at Google just open-sourced the exact engineering playbook their senior engineers follow. ๐คฏ
It's called Agent Skills by Addy Osmani. 23 production-grade skills that teach AI coding agents to work like a senior engineer.
Not generic prompts. Structured workflows with steps, quality gates, and verification at every stage.
7 commands that map to how real software gets built:
โ /spec : define what to build before writing code
โ /plan : break it into small atomic tasks
โ /build : implement one slice at a time
โ /test : prove it works with real evidence
โ /review : five-axis code review before merge
โ /code-simplify : clarity over cleverness
โ /ship : deploy with confidence
Every skill has an anti-rationalization table the excuses AI agents make to skip steps like "I'll add tests later" with documented counter-arguments built in.
Works with Claude Code, Cursor, Gemini CLI, GitHub Copilot, Codex, and Windsurf.
Based on Google's internal engineering practices. Free. MIT license.
Well-played: check out my first song, top listens, and all-time hits since my first day on Spotify, 4/9/23. Find yours at Your Party of The Year(s)!
https://t.co/HcC6BJB5wU
โค๏ธโค๏ธ Happy Motherโs Day โค๏ธโค๏ธ
Appreciation to mothers everywhere who brought us all into the world and nurtured their beloved children ๐ฅฐ
If you'd like to support us:
โ First of all, and most important - please don't harass anyone over this.
โ Comment, Like and Repost this thread.
โ Upvote our posts on Reddit:
1. https://t.co/AAxSCwlXlm
2. https://t.co/3VJqhvs2lk
- Join our new Discord server: https://t.co/ZrKfJ6JlsS
- Go to https://t.co/4GK6JyYzHf to learn more.
Thank you for sticking with us - for some of you, that's been ten years. We don't take it for granted.
@GooglePlayBiz@GforPublishers@AndroidDev@googledevs
6/6
Exoplanet...
This striking moment was captured by photographer Gustavo Ramirez, showing a rare shelf cloud formation stretching across the horizon.
by stable_genius
The United States Army once paid Hershey's to make the worst chocolate bar in history....
It was 1937 and Captain Paul Logan of US Army Quartermaster General's office sat down with Hershey's chief chemist Sam Hinkle and gave him one of the strangest product briefs in the history of food manufacturing. He needed a chocolate bar that weighed four ounces, could withstand extreme heat without melting, delivered enough calories to keep a soldier alive in an emergency, and tasted, in Logan's exact words, only a little better than a boiled potato.
He did not want it to taste good. If it tasted good soldiers would eat it whenever they felt like it and have nothing left when they actually needed it. The solution was to engineer the palatability out of it deliberately. Make it just edible enough that a starving man would eat it. Make it just unpleasant enough that no one would eat it for fun.
Hinkle got to work. He cut the sugar dramatically. He increased the bitter chocolate liquor. He added oat flour, which created a dry, chalky, unpleasant texture. The resulting mixture was so thick and stiff that it could not be poured into molds at all. Every single bar had to be pressed in by hand. Before the war ended Hershey's had made more than three billion of them.
When American GIs discovered that European civilians, who had never encountered the D ration bar and had no established low expectations of it, would accept a piece of Hershey's military chocolate with genuine enthusiasm, some soldiers began trading their bars to unsuspecting locals in exchange for cigarettes, food and goodwill, then watching the civilian take their first bite with a mixture of guilt and private amusement.
ยฉ Eats History
#archaeohistories
#DQSG Web Store Launch Campaign๐ช
We're launching a Web Store where you can purchase special Gem Packs only available there.โจ
To celebrate, weโre running a special campaign! If we reach a total of 6,000 Likes or Reposts globally across all campaign postsโincluding this postโwe'll gift players Premium Transmuter Vouchers for 10 pulls on the Web Store.๐
๐How to Participateโ
1) Follow @DQSG_EN
2) Repost this post
โผWeb Store
https://t.co/QNtUhDmPKk
*The Web Store will open when the game officially launches.
*The Web Store is not available in certain regions.
#DQSGwebstore
"I was born 87 years ago. For 65 years I've ruled as Tamriel's Emperor. But for all these years I have never been the ruler of my own dreams. I have seen the Gates of Oblivion, beyond which no waking eye may see. Behold, in Darkness a Doom sweeps the land. This is the 27th of Last Seed; the Year of Akatosh 433. These are the closing days of the 3rd Era, and the final hours of my life."
--Today is the 20th anniversary of the initial release of The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion!
Watch and weep. Insider tells the real story about the Indian takeover of IT where she works.
Most Americans still have no idea how ridiculous this has all become.