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Tesla is now officially selling used Cybertrucks directly from its inventory. Tesla will transport one to any Tesla delivery location of your choice in the continental US for up to $2,500.
Prices currently start at $66,200 for a used Foundation Series with 2,566 miles, and peak at $94,800 for a used Cyberbeast (non-foundation series) with 5,256 miles.
There are various Foundation and non-Foundation Series trucks available, including 2024 and 2025 model year trucks.
(The $2,500 delivery transportation fee is an estimate and will be confirmed once an order is placed)
POV: claude traveled 6 months into the future and told you exactly how your next move failed.
it's called a premortem.
daniel kahneman (nobel prize-winning psychologist behind "thinking fast and slow") called it his single most valuable decision-making technique.
when you ask claude "is this a good plan?" it finds all the reasons to say yes.
that's what it was trained to do (to be helpful and agreeable). so you walk away feeling confident.
you execute, and spend weeks / months building on top of that plan.
then it blows up.
and you realize the problem was obvious in hindsight, you just never stress-tested it because claude told you it was solid.
a premortem fixes this by flipping the frame.
instead of asking "what could go wrong?" you tell claude "it's 6 months from now and this is already dead. tell me how it died."
that shift turns off claude's optimism because there's nothing to be optimistic about. the premise already says it failed.
so claude stops looking for reasons your plan will work and starts explaining how it fell apart.
claude comes back with every way your plan could die, each one with a full failure story and the early warning signs to watch for.
then a synthesis pulls it all together:
> which failure is most likely
> which failure is most dangerous
> the single biggest hidden assumption you're making (often the most valuable part)
> a revised version of your plan with the gaps closed
you say "premortem this" and give it your plan. the skill handles the rest.
POV: claude traveled 6 months into the future and told you exactly how your next move failed.
it's called a premortem.
daniel kahneman (nobel prize-winning psychologist behind "thinking fast and slow") called it his single most valuable decision-making technique.
when you ask claude "is this a good plan?" it finds all the reasons to say yes.
that's what it was trained to do (to be helpful and agreeable). so you walk away feeling confident.
you execute, and spend weeks / months building on top of that plan.
then it blows up.
and you realize the problem was obvious in hindsight, you just never stress-tested it because claude told you it was solid.
a premortem fixes this by flipping the frame.
instead of asking "what could go wrong?" you tell claude "it's 6 months from now and this is already dead. tell me how it died."
that shift turns off claude's optimism because there's nothing to be optimistic about. the premise already says it failed.
so claude stops looking for reasons your plan will work and starts explaining how it fell apart.
claude comes back with every way your plan could die, each one with a full failure story and the early warning signs to watch for.
then a synthesis pulls it all together:
> which failure is most likely
> which failure is most dangerous
> the single biggest hidden assumption you're making (often the most valuable part)
> a revised version of your plan with the gaps closed
you say "premortem this" and give it your plan. the skill handles the rest.
It’s the “small things”: a few minutes of properly executed rotator cuff work, a movement for glute medius, neck work (yes neck work), etc. that let you do the big things (heavy-ish compound movements, cardio etc) for decade after decade, pain free. Learn it here:
Joe DiMaggio 13 year career:
1936 - World Series
1937 - World Series
1938 - World Series
1939 - World Series
1941 - World Series
1943 - WW II
1944 - WW II
1945 - WW II
1947 - World Series
1949 - World Series
1950 - World Series
1951 - World Series