Elon's Algorithm:
1. Make Requirements Less Dumb
2. Delete the Part or Process Step
3. Optimize
4. Accelerate
5. Automate
"The Algorithm is a five step process that [Elon] installs at all his companies — it's his method for breaking bottlenecks.
It starts by questioning the requirements.
Question every requirement. It doesn't matter how smart the person is. Accept no requirements from departments, they must have a human name attached to them.
The second step is to delete and simplify.
Delete anything you possibly can. The most useful heuristic is you have to over-delete. If you aren't adding back at least 10% of what you deleted then you haven't been deleting enough.
The reason to simplify is that you get both reliability and low cost. You want fewer parts and fewer lines of code. Complexity is recursive...each additional element causes more complexity and more work.
Those first two steps carry 80% of the weight.
Number three is optimize which is typical engineering work. The forth is accelerate which is just...go faster. And the fifth is automate.
The problem is almost everybody does these five steps in reverse order."
This 30-min workshop by the creator of Claude Code will teach you more about vibe-coding than 100 YouTube video guides.
Bookmark it & give it 30 minutes today. This video will change the way you use Claude forever.
Anthropic pays engineers $750,000+ a year to understand how LLMs work.
Stanford just put a 2 hour lecture that covers 80% of it for FREE.
Bookmark this. Give it 2 hours today.
It might be the highest ROI thing you do this month:
Instead of just watching an hour of Netflix, why not dive into this 2-hour Stanford lecture on AI careers? It’s packed with insights that could give you a real edge in the AI race, more than all the AI content you’ve seen this year.
🚨 Sam Altman literally gave a 43-minute masterclass on turning ideas into billion-dollar companies.
Most people will never watch it.
And instead of hype, he broke down what actually makes startups work.
No fluff. Just reality.
He explained that ideas don’t matter nearly as much as execution. The difference between something small and something massive isn’t the idea it’s how relentlessly it’s built and improved over time.
He also emphasized that the best founders don’t chase everything. They focus on one thing that truly matters and push it forward with extreme clarity. Distraction kills more startups than competition ever will.
And then there’s scale. Truly big companies aren’t built for a niche they solve problems that millions of people care about. If the market isn’t large enough, the outcome won’t be either.
His biggest insight? Startups don’t win because they’re smarter they win because they stay in the game longer and iterate faster.
That’s why this masterclass stands out.
Because while most people are waiting for the perfect idea…
The best ones are already building.
🚨 In 2014, a Stanford lecture explained business competition better than most 2-year MBAs ever could.
Almost no one talks about it.
It came from Peter Thiel and instead of repeating textbook ideas, he flipped how we think about competition.
Watching it changes your perspective instantly.
He argues that competition is for losers. When you’re competing, you’re fighting for margins, attention, and survival. The real goal isn’t to win in a crowded market it’s to build something so unique that you don’t have to compete at all.
He also breaks down why monopolies drive real value. The best companies don’t play the same game they create their own. That’s where long-term profits and dominance come from.
And the biggest shift? Stop asking “how do I beat others?”
Start asking “what can I build that no one else can?”
That’s why this Stanford University lecture still stands out.
Because while most people are chasing competition…
Very few are building something truly different.
This 2 hour Stanford lecture on AI careers will teach you more about winning in the AI race than every piece of AI content you have scrolled past this year.
Bookmark this & give it 2 hours, no matter what. It'll be the most productive thing you could do this weekend.
There is simply no exercise physiology podcast with the level of rigor, breadth and depth and practical applications as PERFORM with @DrAndyGalpin This is listen asap and archive to keep coming back to stuff.
You don't need a $200k MBA to master world-class strategy.
Jensen Huang's 2011 Stanford lecture mapped out a $5 trillion future years before anyone saw it coming.
I revisit this video again and again whenever I need unshakeable strategic clarity.
Andrej Karpathy (@karpathy) — co-founded OpenAI, led AI at Tesla, coined "vibe coding."
In 4 minutes he explains why software is changing - and why Claude Skills, MCP servers, and AI agents aren't hype anymore.
They're the foundation of how software gets built from now on.
Imo, worth every second (i've added subtitles)👇
⏰ 7 days to go: We are almost there. On Wednesday, October 22, the European Resuscitation Council will launch the Guidelines on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation 2025 before the ERC Congress #RESUS25 in Rotterdam.
✅ Check all the details about the event and the live stream link
🔗 https://t.co/wpXQ3b9xRT
💙 This event is a collaborative effort between the European Resuscitation Council, the American Heart Association and the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR).
❤️ All the different sessions will be made available via live-stream in parallel, and at no cost to the viewer. We look forward to your participation and encourage you to join the sessions that interest you the most.
💯 Do not worry if you cannot make it. The live-stream sessions will be recorded and will be available on the ERC platform.
#ERC #ILCOR #AHA #CPR #Guidelines2025 #ERCGuidelines #resuscitation #savelives #StrongerTogether
If you're serious about your health this year, you need to be lifting weights.
I've been training and coaching for the last 17 years.
Here are the Top 13 exercises on the planet to get in the best shape of your life:
(Videos of each included)