claude fable 5 can scrape thousands of sold homes and finds the patios with zero shade in 100°+ heat. then it mails the owner a postcard with the fix rendered into their own backyard
here's the system you can sell to contractors:
- scrapes every home sold in the metro in the last 12 months (recent buyers spend the most)
- vision-reads the listing photos, skips the 64% with cover already
- measures the sun on each patio, hour by hour, off google's satellite data
- renders a louvered pergola into the owner's actual backyard photo
- prints the diagnosis on the postcard: "your patio takes 11 hours of direct sun a day. saturday it hits 97°."
- QR opens a heat report for their exact address with a booking link
every install is $6.5k to $18k, one close covers months of retainers and homes sell every single day.
reply "SYSTEM" + RT and i'll send you a free guide so you can build this too (must be following so i can DM you)
My Uber driver asked what I do for work.
"Software."
"Cool. Can you look at something?"
He handed me his phone at a red light. Terminal. Claude chat. Green P&L.
+$6,200.
He drives Uber 4 days a week. Makes $1,100. Has a 2-year-old daughter.
"Where did you find this?"
"Your article. The 14,000 wallets one."
He read it three months ago. Didn't understand half of it. Asked Claude to explain it like he's five.
214 messages. All during breaks between rides. Parked at gas stations. Waiting for pings.
First thing Claude told him: 87% of wallets lose money. Don't be the 87%.
He installed poly_data. Fed it to Claude. Found 47 wallets with Sharpe above 2.0. Filtered crypto only. Quarter Kelly. $200 starting bankroll. From his tips.
93 messages later Claude helped him build the 20-line brain from the article. Bayesian updates. EV filter at 5%. Fully automated.
Last 45 days:
→ 480 trades
→ 91.3% win rate
→ +$6,200
Best trade: whale convergence on Fed rate cut. 4 wallets entered in 2 minutes. Entry $0.12. Resolved $1.00. +$1,760. While dropping off a passenger at JFK.
The passenger tipped him $5. The bot made $1,760.
His wife found the Telegram alerts on his phone. Thought he was texting another woman.
He showed her the P&L curve.
"Can you make me one?"
"How long until you quit driving?"
He looked at me through the rearview mirror.
"I'm not stopping. Uber is my cover story."
I wrote the article. He actually opened terminal.
You only need Claude + laptop + 1 hour/day.
Giving This Free for 24 hours. To get it:
1. Comment the word 'AutoPilot'
2. Like and Retweet this post
3. Follow me @marryevan999
thinking about that time Manny bumped into Floyd at a Lakers game a few year after their 2015 fight (split $400m) and just looked at each like “bro, we made so much money”
JUST IN: Thousands of users are canceling Disney+ subscriptions after Elon Musk told CEO Bob Iger to "go f*ck yourself" for blackmailing him over advertising on X.
I'm convinced that there is one skill that separates truly intelligent people from those that aren't:
Listening.
This concept of "being a recorder" by Rick Rubin explains it perfectly.
In less than a minute, Rubin provides 4 simple steps that, if followed, will change how you think about your interactions with others.
Step 1: "It starts with coming in blank. Not having any preconceived ideas, being open, and really listening. Not thinking about what you're going to say next or what your opinion is."
Step 2: "Basically being a recorder. Just hearing what comes in. Processing that information and trying to do our best to do that without any of the beliefs we might have to impact what that is."
Step 3: "I don't want to have any reaction happening when you're speaking and want to be as neutral as possible. My goal is not to form an opinion, it's to understand."
Step 4: "If you say something that somehow triggers me, I wouldn't challenge you. I would ask how did you find that? How did you get to that place? I want to understand who the person is, and through questioning, we can usually get there."
My thoughts:
So often we enter conversations with a predetermined idea of how it will go, what the other person will say, and how we will respond.
The goal, as Rubin says, should be to "understand, not form an opinion."
When someone says something you disagree with, rather than being triggered, frustrated, or defensive, why not dig deeper into how they came to that opinion?
While different than your own, that doesn't inherently mean they're wrong.
It seems as though at some level we've lost the ability to have civil discourse. To disagree and still coexist.
It doesn't make sense to me and I think––with a little effort––we can change (and just might learn something from each other along the way.)
Thanks for reading.
If you enjoyed this, follow me @blakeaburge for more.
ChatGPT-4 is a phenomenal AI tool.
You can now create an app for the Apple and Google App stores in a fraction of the time.
Here is a real example of a ChatGPT game:
In my researchGPT i actually gave it a very basic set of goals.
The second one seems a lot more in-depth right?
Well its actually worse because for now its too in-depth. AutoGPT will begin to start looping and getting stuck at the planning phase. You wont get any output at all
1. Validate any idea.
This prompt is really powerful.
It uses:
-Scoring System.
-Constructive Feedback.
-Provides ways the idea should be improved.
💬 Copy prompt from image ALT
Shohei Ohtani is the best baseball player on the planet.
While talented but he's been using a forgotten system of goal setting since he’s been in high school.
It's called the Harada Method & here's how it will help you achieve your biggest goals:
GPT-4 is taking the world by storm.
And every AI influencer has a bundle of 250+ prompts as a retweet giveaway.
I'm going to give you just FOUR prompts.
4 whose structure will teach you things.
4 that are actually good.
4 that are free.
(Copy these 4 ChatGPT megaprompts👇)