INSTEAD OF WATCHING NETFLIX TONIGHT. Spend 2 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 new skill. Watch it and bookmark it now.
These assholes drove right over the coating. It's not even a vehicular traffic coating (which is meant to be driven on), and they're wondering why it's pealing? Was it even cured? These people are fucking stupid and can't own up to their own mistakes.
Things that didn’t exist last time Knicks won NBA Championship:
Apple
Microsoft
Google
Facebook
World Wide Web
smartphones
Star Wars
Pac-Man
ESPN
Wi-Fi
Diet Coke
Costco
Home Depot
Netflix
Amazon
Instagram
Uber
Tesla
Saturday Night Live
Memphis Grizzlies
Whole Foods
Chicken McNuggets
Foot Locker
Nvidia
Adobe
eBay
Zara
Seinfeld
Capital One
Miami Heat
Skechers
Ben & Jerry’s
Michael Kors
Honda Civic
The Sopranos
Dell
YouTube
Euro
Pinterest
Airbnb
Spotify
Reddit
PayPal
Yahoo
Expedia
Tommy Hilfiger
American Idol
Cisco
SpaceX
WhatsApp
Red Bull
Buffalo Wild Wings
Toyota Camry
Panera Bread
iPhone
Swiffer
Starburst
Chipotle
Chili’s
Five Guys
Lunchables
Monster Energy
Minnesota Timberwolves
Forever 21
Lululemon
Under Armour
Orlando Magic
Care Bears
Skittles
LinkedIn
Crocs
Febreze
Shake Shack
DoorDash
Android
Zoom
BlackBerry
He-Man
Beanie Babies
Reese’s Pieces
Dallas Mavericks
Wheel of Fortune
Bitcoin
TikTok
Blockbuster
The Simpsons
Harry Potter
Pixar
Jaws
ChatGPT
iPad
Xbox
AirPods
Walkman
Transformers
Game Boy
Beyoncé
Rubik’s Cube
Shark Tank
Rocky
Post-It Notes
People Magazine
MTV
Starbucks Latte
LeBron James
iPod
Microsoft Word
Lionel Messi
Hotmail
Friends
Sour Patch Kids
Victoria’s Secret
Hoka
Callaway Golf
Egg McMuffin
Cristiano Ronaldo
Family Feud
Fanatics
Toronto Raptors
Dairy Queen Blizzard
Tom Brady
Survivor
Mr. Beast
X-Files
Snapchat
New Orleans Pelicans
Super Mario Bros.
Back to the Future
DraftKings
Cinnamon Toast Crunch
The Oprah Winfrey Show
Mark Zuckerberg
Oklahoma City Thunder
Taylor Swift
Charlotte Hornets
South Park
Drake
Craigslist
Happy Meal
Minecraft
Uggs
Pokémon
emojis
3-point line
Honey Nut Cheerios
Baywatch
Wikipedia
IBM PC
Gmail
Fox News
CNN
Michael Jackson’s Thriller
Nintendo NES
Serena Williams
FanDuel
Oakley
CD
DVD
Grand Theft Auto
MySpace
Twitter
Advil
Air Jordan
@tgod34748 I feel like I just got my SE Gen 2. Maybe I’ll just stop wearing a watch then because I can’t afford to upgrade as often as they want me to.
A day after his show was canceled by CBS, Stephen Colbert guest-hosted 'Only in Monroe,' a local public access show in Monroe, Michigan, along with musical director Jack White.
it’s in gemini, just create it in ai studio. oh, that’s for your personal google one account. for workspace you need gemini business. no, not gemini advanced, that’s ai pro now. unless you need ai ultra. oh agents? you do that in spark actually. no, not gemini api managed agents, that’s different. for coding use jules. unless you mean the agentic ide, that’s antigravity. no, that’s the old antigravity, download the new one. actually gemini cli is being deprecated, use antigravity cli. no the flash model is smarter than the pro model. unless you need pro. if it’s video, use flow. no, flow uses veo. no, nano banana is images. actually that’s in gemini now. unless you’re in search, then it’s ai mode. no, research is notebooklm. anyway it’s all very simple.
84% of people have never used AI. less than 1% pay for it.
and you’re out here pitching them on “openclaw” and “AI agents.”
CEOs don’t care about the tech.
they care about spending less time on repetitive BS. getting paid faster. booking more jobs. cutting admin work.
every time I’ve gotten someone to lean into AI it wasn’t because I explained the stack.
it was because I described their day back to them and showed them what goes away.
every company has the budget. they feel the urgency. they don’t have the internal person.
so be the one who shows up speaking their language! not twitters..
bookmark this. happy to answer questions below !
Over the past month, some of you reported Claude Code's quality had slipped. We investigated, and published a post-mortem on the three issues we found.
All are fixed in v2.1.116+ and we’ve reset usage limits for all subscribers.
MrBeast keeps going on podcasts and keeps giving away the entire YouTube playbook. Here’s what he’s said across dozens of appearances.
On the algorithm: it doesn’t exist. Replace “algorithm” with “audience” every time. The algorithm didn’t like your video. No. The audience didn’t. YouTube is a mirror. If people click and watch, it gets promoted. The growth hack industry sells you a god that isn’t there.
On what actually matters: studying humans. The checklist before you hit record. What’s the thumbnail. What’s the title. What’s the first 5 seconds. What’s the first 30. If you can’t answer all four, don’t film.
On titles: under 50 characters. Above that, devices cut them with dot-dot-dot and viewers don’t know what they clicked. Short, simple, so interesting it’ll haunt them if they don’t click.
On thumbnails: simple enough a scrolling viewer instantly understands and feels emotion. His test: “I rode a skateboard with 1,000 other people, it’s about to go off a big ramp.” Hours later, daydreaming, you still wonder what happened to those 1,000 people.
On autoplay: videos autoplay now. Many people never see the thumbnail. You have to visually convince them in the first 5 seconds.
On extremity: “Fiji water sucks” does fine. “Fiji water is the worst water I’ve ever drunk in my life” does way better. The more extreme the promise, the more extreme the delivery has to be.
On matching expectations: title and thumbnail set the promise. The first 10 seconds honor it or break it. Click “Tether is a scam” and the creator starts on anything else, you’re out. Start with “Tether is a scam and I’m gonna teach you why.” Match, then exceed. The thing people undervalue most is literally the first 10 seconds.
On retention: remove every dull moment. Find 10 critical people, make them watch, let them roast it. Ten seconds of talking head without a cut loses people. B-cam three seconds in, different angle, now it’s interesting.
On drop-off: creators drag it out. “I’m going to eat $100 ice cream, but first…” and then it’s them birthday shopping for their mom. Give them why they clicked. Tell them why to watch. Stay on topic. Upper echelon of YouTube.
On the real metric: it’s the next video. If they loved what they just watched, they watch your next one. You don’t want “that was good, but enough for the day.” You want “holy crap, what’s that?” and they watch 10 in a row.
On quality vs quantity: easier to get 5M views on one video than 50K on 100. Small creators post stuff that isn’t bad but isn’t great, nothing pops off, no audience forms. Upload a third or a fifth as often and make each one so good the algorithm has to promote it.
On the consistency trap: a schedule you can’t hit at quality is dangerous. “Monday I said I’d upload” floors your quality at exactly the level viewers notice. They watch less. Longevity suffers.
On the first 100: they’re going to suck. You think they’re good. They’re not. When he was 14 he thought his videos were the best in the world. They were terrible. Under 1,000 subscribers, your videos probably aren’t good yet.
On the improvement loop: ship 100, improve one thing each time. Second, better script. Third, new editing trick. Fourth, vocal inflections. Fifth, thumbnail. Sixth, title. No such thing as a perfect video.
On analysis paralysis: planning your first video for three months is the worst move. Your first 10 get zero views. Confirmed. Stop thinking, start shipping. On your 101st we’ll talk.
On the ceiling: “I could start a new channel tomorrow without my face, my voice, or promoting it, and hit 20M subscribers in six months. If you knew what I knew, you could get 10M from wherever you are.”
Every creator watching a 30-second clip thinks they got the tip. They got one tile from a mosaic he’s built in public for years.