🚨 Anthropic just showed a 27-minute workshop on how to actually do prompts for Claude.
Taught by the people who built it.
Free. No registration. No paywall.
I've seen $300 courses that don't cover what they teach in the first 8 minutes.
Watch it and bookmark it now.
instead of watching 2 hours of Netflix tonight, watch this Stanford lecture
it's the clearest explanation I've seen of how ChatGPT and Claude actually work
useful whether you've never touched AI in your life or have been using it every day for the past year
I took the key ideas and turned them into a practical guide on how to actually get 100% out of Claude
everything in one place
Instead of watching an hour of Netflix, watch this 2 hour hour Stanford lecture will teach you more about how LLMs like ChatGPT and Claude are built than most people working at top AI companies learn in their entire careers.
In 1979, Jackie Kennedy Onassis bought Red Gate Farm in Aquinnah on Martha’s Vineyard for just over one million dollars. The 340-acre property was filled with windswept dunes, salt-blasted heathlands, and quiet ponds. Jackie fell in love with the natural beauty immediately. She wanted a life close to nature. There would be no pool or tennis courts. She wanted to swim in the ocean, breathe fresh salt air, ride her bicycle to the lighthouse each morning, run on the beach at low tide, and read on her deck in the afternoon.
Her daughter Caroline later wrote that Jackie loved the old stone walls, the clay cliffs, and the blue heron that lived by the pond behind the dunes. Jackie raised her children there, and later Caroline raised hers. For three generations, the family created traditions on the property. They set lobster traps in Menemsha Pond, entered county fairs, grew vegetables, and collected seashells from the beach every day.
When Jackie passed away in 1994, she left Red Gate Farm to Caroline. In 2013, Caroline and her husband Edwin Schlossberg donated 30 acres along Moshup Trail to the Vineyard Conservation Society. The land was valued at 3.7 million dollars.
By 2019, Caroline’s children had grown up, and she decided it was time for them to explore new opportunities. She put Red Gate Farm on the market for 65 million dollars. The estate had a mile of private beach, rare coastal heathlands home to endangered species, and land considered one of the most important natural tracts in Massachusetts.
Instead of selling to the highest bidder, Caroline worked with the Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank and the Sheriff’s Meadow Foundation. In December 2020, they bought 304 acres for 27 million dollars. In 2021, the Land Bank purchased another 32 acres for 10 million dollars. In total, 336 acres were preserved. The land became the Squibnocket Pond Reservation, open to the public forever.
The Kennedy family kept just 95 acres for their homes and memories. Caroline could have earned 65 million dollars by selling to a tech billionaire, but she chose preservation. She said the family wanted to be worthy stewards of this fragile habitat.
Thanks to her decision, the coastal heathlands, endangered arethusa orchids, northern harrier hawks, and blue herons will continue to thrive. Visitors can walk the same beaches where Jackie ran, climb the hills where Caroline raised her children, and experience the wild beauty of a place protected by one family for forty years.
Red Gate Farm is no longer private property. It belongs to everyone. Caroline Kennedy’s choice reminds us that sometimes the greatest wealth comes from giving something precious to the public rather than keeping it for profit.
For folks who care about the democracy but aren’t sure how serious this moment is for the Republic, this is a worthwhile read. An assessment of just how much of our freedom has eroded in just the last 10 months. https://t.co/D26SpbeKtu
So excited about our first-ever Club Random on the road - went to Boca to talk to someone I'd literally have gone anywhere in the world for, Florida Man Billy Joel!!
Trump and Musk talked about waste in humanitarian aid--and I found it. In a warehouse in West Africa, I found millions of doses of valuable American medicines meant to prevent river blindness and other ailments. But Trump canceled distribution, so now they're just gathering dust; when they expire, they will have to be destroyed at great expense. The financial and human cost I saw on this trip -- it was a tragedy caused by the administration's cancelation of USAID, and kids are already dying as a result. So are moms in childbirth. Babies are again being born with AIDS. So when Musk and Rubio say no one has died from aid cuts, I challenge them to join me on a trip like this, and I'll show them how their policies are killing kids. My column: https://t.co/mbCJa7jOJX (with suggestions for readers who want to help)
“Unless your job requires you to be ‘on call’ through all communication channels, turn off email and other work notifications when you are on your time off." Find tips from Kay Burnham on prioritizing your life outside the ticket office. https://t.co/hmyde6DSLO