10/ Second Brain
Make ChatGPT connect dots across everything you've ever discussed.
Paste to ChatGPT: "Look at every conversation we've had. Find the patterns I can't see. What topics keep coming back? What problems am I circling without solving? What's the one thread connecting everything I've been asking about? Tell me what I'm really trying to figure out."
9/ One-Page Strategy
Compress any complex problem into one page of clarity.
Paste to ChatGPT: "Here's my situation: [dump everything]. Turn this into a one-page strategy document. The problem in one sentence, the goal in one sentence, 3 moves that matter, 3 things to stop doing, and the one metric that tells me if it's working."
8/ Invisible Script
Find the beliefs running your life that you've never questioned.
Paste to ChatGPT: "Based on everything I've told you, what are the invisible scripts running my life? The beliefs about money, success, relationships, and myself that I've never questioned but are probably shaping every decision I make. Name them and tell me which one is costing me the most."
7/ Steal the Playbook
Reverse-engineer anyone's success from public information.
Paste to ChatGPT: "Search [person or company] and reverse-engineer their strategy. How they grew, how they make money, what they do differently, and the specific moves I could steal and apply to [my situation]. Give me the playbook, not the biography."
6/ Opposite Day
Force ChatGPT to argue against its own answer.
Paste to ChatGPT: "Give me your best answer to [question]. Then immediately argue against your own answer as hard as you can. Try to destroy it. Then tell me which side actually wins and what the truth probably is."
5/ Explain to a Child, CEO, and Engineer
Same concept, three levels. Find the gaps in your understanding.
Paste to ChatGPT: "Explain [concept] three ways: once to a 10-year-old, once to a CEO who needs to make a decision about it, and once to an engineer who needs to build it. Use different language, depth, and focus for each."
4/ Failure Predictor
Find every way your plan dies before you start.
Paste to ChatGPT: "Here's my plan: [paste it]. Run a pre-mortem. It's 6 months from now and this failed completely. Write the story of exactly how it fell apart. What went wrong first, what I ignored, and what killed it."
3/ Time Machine
See your decision from the future looking back.
Paste to ChatGPT: "I'm about to [decision]. Write me two letters from myself 5 years from now. One where I did it and one where I didn't. Be brutally specific about what my life looks like in each version."
2/ Expert Panel
5 experts argue your problem and agree on one answer.
Paste to ChatGPT: "Assemble 5 experts with different perspectives on [your problem]. Have them debate it, challenge each other, and agree on one conclusion they'd all stand behind. Show me the debate and the final answer."
1/ Reverse Interview
Makes ChatGPT ask YOU the questions to give a better answer.
Paste to ChatGPT: "I need help with [topic]. Don't answer yet. Interview me first. Ask me the 5 most important questions you need answered to give me the best possible response. Wait for my answers, then respond."
@ZZoariah Muslims continue to be in the same social state as they were before BJP came to power, if anything they may have been better off socially now than before.
The only thing that is causing them angst is their loss of political relevance, n their loss of power as al bloc voter.
His name is Pradeep Kasni.
He was an officer in the Haryana administration for thirty four years. In all that time, he became famous for one number, and it is a number that tells you everything about how this country sometimes treats its most honest people.
He was transferred seventy one times.
Seventy one transfers in thirty four years. That works out to him being uprooted, on average, roughly every six months for his entire career.
New posting, new city, new desk, again and again and again.
There were years when he was moved three times in a single month.
Most officers build a career in one direction. Kasni built his by being repeatedly pushed sideways.
He was not transferred for failing at his job.
By every account, the opposite was true.
He was moved because he kept doing his job exactly as the rules required, and refused to bend files the way powerful people wanted them bent.
As he once put it, sometimes you know how a government or a minister wants a file to be treated. When officers like him acted differently, a transfer order would arrive by the evening.
The final insult came at the very end.
For his last posting, he was sent as an officer to a government board.
When he arrived, he found something strange.
There were no files, no staff, and no real work.
He filed a request under the Right to Information Act to understand what was happening.
The answer that came back was almost unbelievable.
The board he had been posted to had been defunct, officially shut down, for years.
He had been transferred into a department that did not actually exist.
And because the post was not real, he was not even paid his salary for the last six months of his career.
He retired still fighting that injustice, and said he would keep fighting it.
A man who gave the state thirty four honest years was rewarded, at the end, with a posting to an office that was not there.
Follow for verified stories India deserves to remember.
Indian born Muslim says: "I was born in India and raised in India. But I fully support Pakistan and Azad Kashmir. As Muslims, as believers, we are one body. Our allegiance is not to a passport or some border. It is to Allah, Muhammad and to our fellow Muslims."
Don't hate him for his disloyalty fanaticism. First, understand where it comes from. Second, accept the reality of the situation. Finally, work for a Hindu Rashtra so people like him (and the liberals who support him) can never be a threat to India.
This book was published in 1916 by Benaras Hindu University...
Not available now. All the copies got destroyed. One copy was available in the library of California University, which has been digitised by Microsoft. It is a beautiful introduction to Hinduism, without any school affiliations. It is especially suited to youth. You may go through at leisure. It has 304 pages and share it further with your known younger generation kids. This is a rare book on “Sanatana Dharma” - Please READ and share it to our youth group as much as possible... https://t.co/pKkRmqtP6d
JUST INFO ❗
There’s a GitHub repo called Microsoft Activation Scripts.
It has over 178,000 stars and has been online for more than 6 years. The project is maintained by a group called massgravel and can activate Windows and Office using several different methods.
What makes it interesting is that it’s hosted on GitHub, a platform owned by Microsoft, yet it remains publicly available. The repo supports Windows 7 through Windows 11, Office 2010 through Office 2024, plus Project and Visio.
Meanwhile, Microsoft charges for Windows licenses and Microsoft 365 subscriptions, with prices continuing to rise over the years. The repo, however, remains free and open-source under the GPL-3.0 license.
Last commit: 1 week ago.
178k+ stars. Hosted on Microsoft. Activates Microsoft products.
Do not install it.
Link 🔗 :- https://t.co/0zzIPdNrBj