🚨 BREAKING: Goodbye, PowerPoint.
Claude can now create stunning presentations in minutes. 🤯
No design skills. No stress. No wasting hours on slides.
Here are 6 powerful prompts that turn Claude into your AI presentation designer 👇🧵
If you have a Gmail account, you need to read this. Google's AI now scans your emails and attachments, bank statements, tax files, medical letters, all of it.
It turned on by default, and there's a class-action lawsuit over how.
5 moves to shut it off, the switch is hidden in two places:
THEY JUST STOLE YOUR IPHONE.
The thief turned it off instantly.
In the "Find My" app, you see it's offline.
Your bank accounts, your private photos, your entire life... in their hands.
That phone will just be a brick if you activated these 3 SETTINGS: 👇
IF YOU DIED TOMORROW, YOUR FAMILY WOULDN'T BE ABLE TO ACCESS A SINGLE THING YOU OWN DIGITALLY.
BANK ACCOUNTS. PASSWORDS. CLOUD STORAGE. ALL OF IT PERMANENTLY LOCKED AWAY.
HERE'S HOW TO FIX IT IN 30 MINUTES:
I gave Claude’s new Fable model all the data I had regarding the 2025 Saratoga meet and asked it what factors cause Pick-3, 4, and 5 sequences to over- and underpay relative to win probabilities imputed from the exacta pool. Its findings below. 1/8
The idea that more data equals better decisions is a myth. If you collect reams of information on your customer, there's a genuine risk of overconfidence.
Evidence for this stretches back to a 1973 study by Paul Slovic from the University of Oregon.
He gave professional horse racing handicappers different amounts of information to predict race outcomes. Sometimes, this was 5 variables, other times, it was 10, 20, 30, 50, or 88.
Then he asked: What's your prediction and how confident are you?
Whether the handicappers had 5 variables or 88, accuracy stayed the same. But the more information they got, the more confident they became.
Marketers slip into the same trap. As a result, they often go through huge volumes of data. But that often just creates distraction, rather than better outcomes.
So instead of asking "How many variables can we get?", you should ask "What are the most important variables?".
In our Kentucky Derby episode from the Behavioral Science for Brands podcast vault, MichaelAaron Flicker and I talk about Slovic’s experiment and two other insights:
🔬 The Premortem - a technique from psychologist Gary Klein to prevent overconfidence by assuming your project has already failed
🐴 The Behaviour-Attitude Chain - why we feel more confident in a decision after we've made it than before
🎧 Listen on Spotify: https://t.co/RJ8gaER3mz
🎧 Listen on Apple: https://t.co/Au142tV36N
🎧 Listen on YouTube: https://t.co/RAFvGvHVqm
CAW opponents are missing the big thing.
It's not that they bet a ton of money the last few seconds. It's that they knew WHICH HORSE to drop the money on.
How did THEY know which horse could not lose?
That's not algorithm. That's inside information.
REMEMBER WHEN they said natural treatments don't work?
Here's how a $2 bottle of H2O2 from any pharmacy can target cancer cells better than $100,000 chemo treatments.
My patients were desperate. Chemo wasn't working. Side effects were destroying their quality of life.
Then I found out something Big Pharma really doesn't want you to know - hydrogen peroxide makes your body so oxygen-rich that cancer cells can't handle it.
The real turning point was Sarah, stage 4 breast cancer, who started the 35% food grade H2O2 protocol. Three drops in water, three times a day.
Her tumor markers dropped 60% in 8 weeks. Her oncologist couldn't believe it.
Now I tell all my cancer patients about this simple protocol. It's easy to get, doesn't break the bank, and actually works with your body instead of wrecking it.
The medicine you need might already be in your medicine cabinet.
If I were in my 30s or 40s right now and wanted to leverage AI to retire within 10 years, here's what I'd do:
1. Immediately form an LLC company. Not next month. Not once you're 'ready.' This week.
Fifteen years of acid reflux. Fifteen. Omeprazole every morning since I was twenty. BPC-157, oral, 500 mcg twice a day, stomach empty. Three weeks and the burn was gone. Three. Weeks. Brought it up to my gastro guy and he gave me a look like I'd asked about crack. Wouldn't even engage. Walked out, never went back. Took me a decade and a half but I'm grateful
Japanese researchers found that pressing a specific point on your wrist for 60 seconds before sleep reduces cortisol by 34% and cuts the time to fall asleep in half.
It's been used in Japanese hospitals for 40 years.
It was never introduced to Western medicine. Read till end 🪡