Med students, listen up! Today let me explain how to analyze a Complete Blood Count (CBC) report step by step. A CBC is more than just numbers; it’s a clinical narrative. Let’s break down this real patient’s report together. 👇
A man spends 50 years teaching at MIT.
He knows his time is running out.
So he records one last lecture — everything he knows, distilled into a single hour.
He died 5 months later.
This is that lecture.
The most important hour you'll watch this week. 👇
Bookmark it for later
Stop telling ChatGPT "Write me an email"
Stop telling ChatGPT "Write me an email"
Stop telling ChatGPT "Write me an email"
Bad request = Bad result.
Use these commands instead and you'll see the magic:
STOP telling ChatGPT "Write like a Human"
STOP telling ChatGPT "Humanise this"
STOP telling ChatGPT "Humanise that"
Bad prompt = Bad result
These prompts are the best 👇
Finally graduated with my PhD @durham_uni at the tender age of 64, twenty years after I first started. Delighted to be joined by 'proud dad' aged 90. Huge thanks to supervisors and all at @Durham_SGIA for a second chance in education. It's never too late....... #LifelongLearning
Stop what ever you are doing. Watch this video for 30 minutes and your life will change for better.
This is how to build a software or website without knowing how to code.
Please retweet for people to learn
Your phone isn’t personal. It’s a data sensor with a camera.
In 2026, privacy isn’t a feature. It’s a fight.
If you haven’t audited your device, you’re not the user. You’re the product.
Here’s the 18-step Ghost Protocol to take your phone back.
I have interviewed more than a dozen times for a PhD across the USA and Canada…
This is what the PhD interviews actually test
Most applicants think the PhD interview is about proving how smart they are.
It’s not.
Committees already know you’re smart.
You wouldn’t be in the room otherwise.
Here’s what they’re really assessing 👇
⸻
1️⃣ Can you think?
They’re watching how you reason in real time.
• How you frame problems
• How you respond to uncertainty
• How you adjust when challenged
Perfect answers matter less than disciplined thinking.
⸻
2️⃣ Do you understand what a PhD actually is?
A PhD is not:
❌ more classes
❌ prestige
❌ being told what to do
It is:
✔ ambiguity
✔ long timelines
✔ rejection
✔ publishing before certainty
They’re testing whether you know what you’re signing up for.
⸻
3️⃣ Are you research-obsessed or outcome-obsessed?
Strong signal:
“I keep thinking about this question because…”
Weak signal:
“I want a PhD so I can…”
They want curiosity that survives boredom, not motivation that depends on applause.
⸻
4️⃣ Can you be mentored without being managed?
They’re asking (implicitly):
• Will you take feedback without defensiveness?
• Can you work independently?
• Will you ask good questions?
A PhD student is not a task-doer.
They’re a developing colleague.
⸻
5️⃣ Are you a risk or an investment?
Funding is limited.
Advisors are busy.
Slots are few.
They’re evaluating:
→ intellectual trajectory
→ emotional regulation
→ long-term fit
Not just whether you’re brilliant.
Whether you’re sustainable.
⸻
Bottom line:
PhD interviews are less about proving yourself and more about revealing yourself.
The candidates who do best don’t perform.
They explain how they think.
⸻
If you’re preparing for PhD interviews this cycle:
• stop memorizing answers
• start clarifying your research logic
• practice thinking out loud
That’s the real test.
—
If this was useful, repost for someone interviewing soon.