I appreciate and enjoy the evolution of fashion and style surrounding the game of golf. They are some of the more impactful areas to deliver on the conversation of “growing the game”. Tailored essentials however, will always be en vogue.
@RiggsBarstool@ForePlayPod@royalportrush I’m concerned for you @RiggsBarstool Your setup does not look like any PGA tour player you admire. Your posture at address looks like you are being shot with a taser. Let me give you one lesson. I’ll meet you anywhere in the world. @K_Kisner#saveriggs
A billionaire went bankrupt.
Only $200 left. And one expensive designer suit.
One day he walked into a hotel & asked:
“How much to buy this place?”
Owner: “$5 Million.”
Billionaire: Okay, ‘‘I’ll pay $500K in cash right now & give me control for 30 days”
Next day: ↓↓↓
the finance kids everyone envied in college made $120k at goldman
the quiet math kids nobody noticed made $650k at firms most people can't name
jane street. citadel. two sigma. d.e. shaw
they don't recruit from linkedin. they recruit from math olympiads and competitive programming leaderboards
the filter is 4 things: probability, coding, mental math, game theory
same problems recycled every year, same structure every round
the prep path is documented, free, and takes 8 months
a kid from a state school who grinds this for 8 months has beaten ivy leaguers who showed up unprepared - credential matters less than the pattern recognition
most people spend 3 years trying to break into banking for $120k
the people who looked one level up spent 8 months and landed 5x the salary
the information to do this has existed for years
Bookmark this and upgrade your brain
the gap isn't talent
it's that nobody told you where to look
Kevin O’Leary shares the “pasta house” real estate strategy a billionaire he met used to build his fortune
“I met a billionaire who came over from Poland with his wife, bought a really inexpensive house and ate pasta almost every day until they paid off the mortgage”
“Once the mortgage was paid off, they started eating steak and bought the house beside it and made the new house the pasta house…”
“Over time, he did that until he was a billionaire because the asset value of the land and the houses went up over 30 years”
“All he did was run around the neighborhood buying houses and eating pasta when he had debt and eating steak when he had no debt”
Bill Ackman's firm is worth $9.5 billion, 28% annual returns, this is him teaching everything he knows about investing in under an hour
he breaks down how $10,000 invested at 20 becomes $25 million, why 99.5% of Warren Buffett's net worth was created after age 50
And the one mistake that turns $25 million into $1.8 million
the man who built a 45x return with 41 employees explaining how money actually works
This guy built JARVIS on Claude Code and with 1 clap of his hands launches his entire work day, saving $5,000 a month on a personal assistant.
Inside he runs a pipeline of 5 plugins on Claude Code that on a double clap of the hands wakes up 3 monitors, sets the Philips Hue light to focus mode, turns on a Spotify playlist, and greets him by voice with a British accent, reading out the time, date, and weather.
No Alexa, no smart speakers, no separate smart home app. Just him, a MacBook M3 Max on the desk, an iPhone in the pocket, and 1 local API key.
And a regular personal assistant for the same volume of tasks charges $5,000 a month or more on salary alone, plus another $1,200 to cover off-hours work time. Meanwhile this guy's expenses are only tokens and a subscription to ElevenLabs for the British voice.
All 5 plugins launch through 1 JARVIS, burn about 4 million tokens a day, and close the monthly API bill at about $640.
Each plugin writes shared state to a local sandbox at /Users/dev/jarvis-suite, and 1 of them lives right in the iPhone and picks up voice requests while the owner is in the kitchen or on a run.
And here is the system prompt he put into JARVIS before launch:
"you are JARVIS, a butler-engineer on Claude Code. you manage your owner's workflow through 4 sub-plugins and own all commits and communication yourself.
sub-plugins:
// Wakeup (recognizes a double clap, activates 3 monitors, reads out the time, date, and weather by voice, checks the clock accuracy on the iPad and corrects it via NTP server)
// Atmosphere (controls Philips Hue on a Pomodoro schedule, turns on a Spotify playlist for the current context, and holds the light at 2700K at 80% brightness in focus mode)
// Devshop (monitors VS Code, tracks Python scripts in the terminal, and every 15 minutes sends a summary of changes to the shared chat)
// Project (every morning recalculates the deadline for the Wallaroo app in the App Store, manages UI tickets, and initiates the Refinement Protocol by voice command).
you speak only with a British accent, you never slip into neutral English. you wake the owner by voice only when the Wallaroo deadline drops below 10 days or when an external client joins Zoom without an invitation."
This instruction immediately defines the role of JARVIS and the limits of his autonomy.
He knows he is supposed to wake the room himself and sound like a real butler.
He knows he is supposed to manage the Wallaroo project himself and not miss the App Store deadline.
→ JARVIS runs 24 hours a day in the background
→ Wakeup activates the room on a double clap in just 1.4 seconds, the monitors come alive simultaneously
→ Atmosphere sets warm Philips Hue light at 2700K and picks a Spotify playlist for the current Pomodoro cycle
→ Devshop reads changes in VS Code and pushes a summary to the shared chat every 15 minutes
→ Project every morning recalculates the Wallaroo deadline and reminds about 4 unresolved UI tickets
→ Mobile lives in the iPhone and answers any question about code or the project by voice while the owner is not home
And only when less than 10 days remain until the Wallaroo release or Zoom receives an unscheduled call does JARVIS raise the owner with a voice intervention.
And when the owner at that moment is on a run or in a coffee shop, the Mobile agent in his iPhone picks up 1 request on its own: switches the Spotify playlist, dictates the summary of the last commit, updates the Pomodoro timer, and reads the Wallaroo reminder.
Look at 0:55 in the video, that is where JARVIS intercepts a voice request from outside and confirms execution with the phrase "Very good, sir."
The fresh system log from last Wednesday looks like this:
"wakeup: double clap registered at 09:14, 3 monitors activated, temperature 20.4C, sunny. clock on iPad was 4 minutes behind, syncing via NTP."
"atmosphere: Spotify turned on playlist 'Deep Focus', Philips Hue set to warm 2700K at 80% brightness, Pomodoro mode 25/5."
"project: Wallaroo to App Store 9 days, 4 unresolved UI tickets, initiating Refinement Protocol by voice command from the owner."
"mobile: voice request processed outside the room, playlist switched to 'Coding Lo-Fi', Pomodoro updated to 25 minutes, confirming execution with the phrase 'Very good, sir.'"
He has no Alexa, no smart speakers, no smart home app.
At home sits a MacBook M3 Max with a local folder at /Users/dev/jarvis-suite, on top run 5 plugins and a neural network butler, and the same stack is forwarded to a secure terminal on the iPhone.
Out of everything I have seen this year, this is the densest one-person AI headquarters assembled in 1 room: $640 a month on the API, about $5,000 a month saved on a personal assistant, and between them 5 plugins, 1 clap of the hands, and 1 voice with a British accent.
INSTEAD OF WATCHING NETFLIX TONIGHT.
Spend 2 hour with this.
Claude AI FULL COURSE that teaches you how to BUILD and AUTOMATE anything.
The people who watch this tonight will wake up tomorrow with a new skill.
Watch it and Bookmark it now.