The person who built Claude Code just showed exactly how to use it.
This single session is worth more than any $1000 course.
30 minutes. Free. Straight from Boris Cherny himself.
Bookmark this before you forget.
Most people using Claude daily are missing 40+ features hiding in plain sight.
INSTEAD OF WATCHING NETFLIX TONIGHT.
Spend 1 hour with this.
Claude AI FULL COURSE that teaches you how to BUILD and AUTOMATE anything.
The people who watch this tonight will wake up tomorrow with a skill that most people will not have in 2 years.
The people who skip it will still be watching Netflix next year wondering why nothing in their life has changed.
Your call.
This guy vibecoded an app that landed him a $15,000 customer almost Instantly.
A year later, he's made $2.5M
This year? He's projected to make $7M
Guys, please listen carefully to me with this:
- He is not a software developer
- He started this with $400
If you are watching this, you are the minority.
Stop assuming other people know what you know about AI. You are a first mover.
This is 100% possible for anyone else to do.
You've gotta check this one out!
Conor Neill on the 3 best ways to start a speech (most people get this wrong):
"I guarantee if you go to conferences, 19 out of 20 speakers will start in one of these ways: 'My name is Conor Neill. I'm from Tango, and this talk is about the latest trend in monitoring strategies.' But all of you are sitting with a piece of paper that already says who I am and what I'm going to talk about. By repeating what you already know, I'm giving a signal that it's time to get your BlackBerry out."
Conor explains the three best ways to start instead:
Third best: A question that matters to the audience.
"How do you phrase a problem that the audience faces in a question?"
Second best: A factoid that shocks.
"There are more people alive today than have ever died. Every two minutes, the energy reaching the earth from the sun is equivalent to the whole annual energy usage of humanity. Does that change how you think about energy?"
The best way: Start like you'd start a story to a child.
"How do we start a story to a child? 'Once upon a time.' And what happens when you say once upon a time? My daughter leans forward, gets ready to hear, engages. We were all trained as kids to know when a story's coming. We also know when a teacher is about to deliver a 40-minute boring lecture."
He explains the grown-up version:
"In business, you don't hear Jack Welch saying 'once upon a time.' Steve Jobs doesn't start his speeches with 'once upon a time.' So there's a grown-up way of saying it: 'In October, the last time I was in this room, there were 120 people here. I was having a conversation with one of the world's experts on public speaking and he said something to me that changed what I think about what's important in speaking.' Now I can pause for 30 seconds, and you want to know what he said."
Conor concludes:
"Stories are about people. They're not about objects. They're not about things. If you want to tell a good story about your company, don't talk about the software talk about the people who built the software. What they do. How they are. What's important to them. What they sacrifice."
Peter Lynch’s 6 Rules for Finding 10x Stocks (Still Relevant Today)
Peter Lynch turned $18M into $14B running the Magellan Fund.
He didn’t chase hype.
He chased value + growth.
Here’s the exact checklist he used before stocks exploded 👇
1️⃣ Trailing P/E < 25
Low expectations = asymmetric upside.
He avoided crowded trades.
2️⃣ Forward P/E < 15
Growth at a reasonable price.
Not cheap junk - quality growing earnings.
3️⃣ Debt-to-Equity < 35%
Too much debt kills compounding.
Balance sheets mattered.
4️⃣ EPS Growth > 15%
Prices follow earnings.
Always.
5️⃣ PEG < 1.2
One of Lynch’s favourite metrics.
Growth that isn’t overpriced.
6️⃣ Market Cap > $5B
Big enough to survive.
Small enough to still run.
Back in 2010, when a student let out a loud, audible yawn during a lecture at Cornell University, Professor Mark Talbert delivered one of the internet's most famous viral rants.
Despite the professor's demand to know "who the one loser is," the student was never identified.
Following the incident, students organized a "Yawn-In" protest, leading Talbert and the college dean to issue an apology.