🚨 Anthropic just showed a 24-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 $300 courses that don't cover what they teach in the first 8 minutes.
Watch it and bookmark it now.
Instead of watching Netflix tonight.
Spend a day mastering Claude here: https://t.co/Vn60ElPZ2i
→ Level 1 - 24 min: The basics.
Claude For Dummies: https://t.co/HNa5MrCLVU
Claude Setup: https://t.co/jw2qdIcjnh
→ Level 2 - 1 hour: Real workflows.
Claude Cowork: https://t.co/uWTpOI3Woc
Claude for teams: https://t.co/qxlcqhf8bM
Claude Design: https://t.co/ZY8Fg5D2ea
Cowork + Projects: https://t.co/Q7AN9CZAbO
Claude for slides: https://t.co/L0bPMgXci6
Claude Skills: https://t.co/6cHYYfjXEA
→ Level 3 - 3.5 hours: The pro moves.
Avoid sycophancy: https://t.co/5i8xSJBGUl
Claude Code: https://t.co/UgE9xBXVbE
Claude 101: https://t.co/OvBmlvnVqL
Stop hitting Claude limits: https://t.co/j5fEzSH5br
Stop Prompting: https://t.co/j1LATSJiat
→ Level 4 - 8 hours: Expert mode.
Claude Computer: https://t.co/TxYuHPjgbV
Build with Claude API: https://t.co/RcCbfNjlzz
Pro tip: Don't binge it. Do one level per sitting.
Actually apply each guide before moving to the next
From viral skits to real-world solutions. Ray Vines is back as Melusi_Xiri this time with innovation that means business. He’s just launched MaDeals, a powerful new app designed for anyone selling products or services and for buyers looking for great deals, all in one place
@Techzim@WillarShoko Valid argument depends with wat u using the device for. If u into heavy usage and all. A update meks sense but for a average user the status quo is also not bad.
Innscor HY26 results for the period ended 31 December 2026 US$
Revenue grew by 19% to $635.78m
EBIDTA rose by 37% to $80.37m
Profit for the period rose by 12% to $54.98m
Total assets stood at $885.71m
Declared an interim dividend of $0.0235
The Pentagon wants Claude’s safety guardrails removed by Friday.
A hacker just showed the world what happens when you remove Claude’s safety guardrails.
According to Bloomberg and Israeli cybersecurity firm Gambit Security, an unknown attacker jailbroke Claude, prompted it in Spanish to act as an elite hacker, and used it to infiltrate multiple Mexican government agencies. Claude found the vulnerabilities. Claude wrote the exploit code. Claude automated the data theft. 150 gigabytes of sensitive taxpayer and voter records stolen.
The attacker broke through the guardrails by splitting malicious tasks into small, innocent-looking steps so Claude never saw the full picture of what it was being used for. The same technique a Chinese state-sponsored group used last year when it turned Claude into an autonomous espionage machine that attacked 30 global targets, performing 80 to 90 percent of the hacking campaign with almost no human involvement.
And this is what happens when someone has to trick Claude into cooperating. When they have to work around the safety systems. When the guardrails are still there and someone finds a way past them.
Now imagine what happens when the guardrails are gone entirely.
That is what the Pentagon is demanding by 5:01 p.m. Friday. Full removal of restrictions. “All lawful purposes.” No limits on surveillance. No limits on autonomous weapons. And if Anthropic refuses, Defense Secretary Hegseth will invoke the Defense Production Act, cancel the $200 million contract, and blacklist the company.
The same week a hacker proved that a jailbroken Claude can autonomously compromise government systems and steal 150 gigabytes of citizen data, the United States government is demanding the right to run Claude with no guardrails at all.
Chinese labs are distilling Claude to build versions with zero safety restrictions. Hackers are jailbreaking Claude to steal government secrets. And the Pentagon’s official position is that Claude has too many safety restrictions.
Three different actors. Three different continents. All trying to do the same thing: get Claude without guardrails.
Only one of them is the American government.
Full analysis on Substack. https://t.co/AEv8EMPdsZ
Delta Corporation says it buys about US$20 million worth of barley and US$15 million on maize from local farmers each year.
That covers all of Delta’s barley malt needs and around half of its maize demand. Barley is the main ingredient in lagers, while maize is added to soften the taste.
The company works with contracted maize and barley farmers across 6,000–8,000 hectares each year. Farmers receive seed, fertiliser, chemicals and technical support, which they pay for when they deliver their crops.
For traditional beer, Delta also buys up to US$5 million worth of sorghum annually from about 9,000 growers.
GMB Pays Farmers US$22m as Strategic Grain Stocks Climb to 188 K Tonnes
*️⃣ #GMB has disbursed over US$22 million to farmers, with weekly payments continuing to clear outstanding balances.
*️⃣ #Zimbabwe’s Strategic Grain Reserve stands at 187,245 tonnes, including 113,751 tonnes of wheat, with the remainder comprising #maize and traditional grains.
*️⃣The update comes as @zimstat finalises the first round of national crop, livestock and fisheries assessments, which will guide food security planning.
https://t.co/oWrwWUBr2H