I believe in one God,
the Father Almighty,
Maker of heaven and earth,
of all things visible and invisible.
I believe in one Lord Jesus Christ,
the Only Begotten Son of God,
born of the Father before all ages.
God from God,
Light from Light,
true God from true God,
begotten, not made,
consubstantial with the Father;
through Him all things were made.
For us men and for our salvation
He came down from heaven,
and by the Holy Spirit
was incarnate of the Virgin Mary,
and became man.
For our sake He was crucified under Pontius Pilate,
He suffered death and was buried,
and rose again on the third day
in accordance with the Scriptures.
He ascended into heaven
and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again in glory
to judge the living and the dead,
and His kingdom will have no end.
I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the Lord, the Giver of life,
who proceeds from the Father and the Son,
who with the Father and the Son is adored and glorified,
who has spoken through the prophets.
I believe in one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church.
I confess one Baptism
for the forgiveness of sins,
and I look forward to the resurrection of the dead
and the life of the world to come.
Amen. 🙏🏼
The Hagia Sophia challenges the idea that cities fall and their projects die. Its architecture, with the dome dematerializing into light, argues that the world is not a closed system. #HagiaSophia#Architecture#Philosophy https://t.co/D7kaZxfesW
Sacred art's principle of 'reverse perspective' challenges urban design. Unlike linear perspective that centers the viewer, icons project outward, engaging the worshiper directly.#UrbanDesign#Architecture#SacredArt https://t.co/D7kaZxfesW
We expelled human scale, and the city became hostile. This isn't accidental; it's the material expression of a philosophy that despises the physical. #Urbanism#Architecture#Philosophy https://t.co/D7kaZxfesW
🇮🇹🇲🇦 Absolute chaos in Rome: Moroccan migrants and fans have taken complete control of the streets near the Colosseum.
Italian police arrive, realize they’re outnumbered and powerless, and are forced to retreat.
This is what open borders have done to Europe.
Writer: Samuel
🚨ANTHROPIC ACABA DE PUBLICAR EL MANUAL PARA MONTAR UNA EMPRESA SIN EMPLEADOS
>CEO: 1 persona.
>empleados: agentes de claude
dura 30 minutos y es gratis
Guarda esto en favoritos para que no lo pierdas.
What would St Augustine have to say about the way some of the American cities look today? #architecture#beauty#4th#usa#cities
Boston declared its West End blighted — forty-six acres, some seven thousand residents, functioning streets, dense kinship, low crime, none of which mattered.
The neighborhood was razed for luxury towers, and the developers hung a sign over the highway that reads today like an accidental confession: If you lived here, you’d be home now.
The displaced grieved clinically, with the symptoms of bereavement, for years — because a neighborhood of the old kind is not housing stock; it is an extension of the body.
Fourteen years later, St. Louis dynamited the doctrine’s award-winning masterpiece on live television.
Concrete spalls. Theories spall faster.
https://t.co/ZuO4zDgvAO
ANTHROPIC JUST DROPPED THE OFFICIAL GUIDE TO PROMPTING FABLE 5.
This is the most important prompting framework I've seen.
Bookmark this before you forget.
Most people treat Fable 5 like a chatbot. That's the mistake.
> don't over-engineer prompts — it degrades output.
> use /loop for autonomous multi-step work.
> give it the goal, not step-by-step commands.
> add a memory file. it learns from past runs.
> spin up 50+ subagents for complex tasks.
Fable 5 isn't an assistant. it's a consultant that leads the work.
Read it before you write another prompt.
Claude → Fable 5 → Autonomous Work → Real Output → Money
Elon Musk literally sat down for a 45-minute talk with Y Combinator that explains how to build world-changing companies better than any business school on earth. This is the advice he gave a room full of young founders:
1. Don't try to build something great. Try to build something useful.
Everyone obsesses over greatness. Musk says that's the wrong target. "I didn't originally think I would build something great. I wanted to try to build something useful. I didn't think I would build anything particularly great. Seemed unlikely, but I wanted to at least try." Aim for useful first. Greatness, if it comes, is a byproduct.
2. When you can't get in the front door, build your own door.
Before Musk started his first company, he tried to get a job at Netscape. "I sent my resume into Netscape and nobody responded. I tried hanging out in the lobby to see if I could bump into someone, but I was too shy to talk to anyone. So I'm like, this is ridiculous, I'll just write software myself." He didn't set out to be a founder. He became one because no one would hire him.
3. He slept in the office and showered at the YMCA.
The origin of his first company was not glamorous. "We couldn't even afford a place to stay. The office was 500 bucks a month, so we just slept in the office and showered at the YMCA." He couldn't afford proper internet either, so he drilled a hole through the office floor and ran a cable to the internet provider downstairs. That was the founder of the future richest man on earth.
4. Keep the chips on the table.
When Musk sold his first company, he received a $20 million cheque. His bank balance went from $10,000 to $20 million overnight. Most people would have stopped. He put almost all of it straight back into his next company. "I kept the chips on the table." He did the same thing decades later, over and over. He hates money sitting idle. Money is fuel for the next mission.
5. Start with the mission, then work backwards to make it a business.
Musk didn't start SpaceX to make money. He went on the NASA website to find out when humans were going to Mars, and there was no plan. So he decided to build one. "There had been no prior example of a rocket startup succeeding. A small chance of success is better than no chance of success." The mission came first. The business model came later.
6. He started SpaceX expecting to fail.
He is brutally honest about the odds. "SpaceX started in mid-2002 expecting to fail. Probably 90% chance of failing. When recruiting people, I said, we're probably going to die, but small chance we might not die." The first three launches failed. The fourth one worked with no money left. "If the fourth launch hadn't worked, it would have been curtains. We made it by the skin of our teeth."
7. Break every problem down to physics.
This is the core of how Musk thinks. "First principles means break things down to the fundamental elements that are most likely to be true, then reason up from there, as opposed to reasoning by analogy." His example is rockets. Everyone priced them based on what old rockets cost. Musk asked what a rocket is actually made of, priced the raw metals, and found the materials were only 1-2% of the historical price. The rest was inefficiency he could attack.
8. When told something takes 24 months, break it down and do it in six.
Last year xAI needed a giant computer to train its AI. Suppliers said it would take 18 to 24 months. "It's like, well, we need to get that done in six months or we won't be competitive." So he broke it into parts. Needed a building, so he found an old factory. Needed power, so he rented generators. Needed cooling, so he rented a quarter of America's mobile cooling capacity. He slept in the data centre and ran cabling himself. It got done.
9. Watch your ego-to-ability ratio.
Musk's single sharpest piece of advice for young founders is about staying honest with yourself. "A major failure mode is when your ego-to-ability ratio gets too high. Then you break the feedback loop to reality." Keep the ego small, internalise responsibility for everything, and stay ruthlessly connected to what's actually true. "You want to close the loop on reality hard. That's a super big deal."
10. Chase work, not glory.
His closing philosophy ties it all together. "It's so hard to be useful. The area under the curve of total utility is how useful you've been to your fellow human beings times how many people. If you aspire to do true work, your probability of success is much higher. Don't aspire to glory, aspire to work."
He was ridiculed for years. The press called him "internet guy attempting to build a rocket company." He agreed it sounded absurd. He did it anyway, because a small chance of doing something useful beat no chance at all.
Here's the thing though....
Musk became the most followed founder alive because everything he does happens in public. The launches, the failures, the talks like this one. The companies made him powerful. The personal brand made his every word travel around the world before he finishes saying it.
We build massive distribution and grow personal brands on X and beyond without our clients lifting a finger.
If you're a founder or VC looking for that kind of exposure, book a call below.
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Claude Fable is back.
But you don't need it to make money with AI. The standard Claude plan is enough.
I've compiled all my personal Claude prompts into a 53-page guide.
These are the exact prompts I use to build AI eBooks that generate $50,000/month.
Like this post + comment "Claude" and I'll DM it to you for free.
⏳ Deleting this in 24 hours.