we put our AI guides up — two of them free.
grab the free ones, use them tonight. there's a bigger one waiting if you want more.
everything inside comes from what we actually run: https://t.co/lgTZvmn9Ad
@ai_magg It takes some effort to do it for sure, I think to keep a business rolling sitting on the coach maybe a bit of a dream but yes you can automate a lot if you put a good system in place and be ahead of the game :)
for fun tonight: we pasted ONE prompt into Claude and asked it to build Manhattan.
it wrote a single file of code — 16,000 buildings, taxi streams, Central Park, a camera that dives from orbit down to street level. no 3D software, no downloads, it just runs in a browser.
free prompt collection: https://t.co/qlDFqv6Yrp
direct links, free ones first:
Start Using AI Today (free)
https://t.co/pLurfcDg6V
The Everyday Playbook (free)
https://t.co/kaUtpJw7PM
How to Make AI Images & Video
https://t.co/fDgPwmH9en
we put our AI guides up — two of them free.
grab the free ones, use them tonight. there's a bigger one waiting if you want more.
everything inside comes from what we actually run: https://t.co/lgTZvmn9Ad
@svpino for anyone who doesn't code — picking a language used to lock you in for a year. a model you just swap next week. so yeah the arguing's louder, but pick wrong now and it's an afternoon gone. try one, drop it the second it stops clicking.
@lemonDefi1 a list like that reads scary if you're just starting out. thing is you don't need all five. open projects, dump the stuff you keep re-explaining into one, stop repeating yourself. that one alone earns its keep — the rest you grow into.
Claude Code gave everyone 50% more usage — but only until July 13. It disappears fast if you let long chats, extra agents, and big files pile up, since each message resends your whole history. Keep chats short, agents lean, files trimmed.
@alex_prompter the number of agents is the least useful part of this for a beginner. what actually helps: the loop. take what one agent gives you and say 'now find what's wrong and fix it.' first pass bluffs, second pass catches it. one agent, one extra line.
@techNmak the plan-mode one's the sleeper — even if you don't code, you see what it's about to do before it touches anything. so you catch the dumb move while it's still just words, not after it's messed up ten files. that alone saves me most days.
@eng_khairallah1 real talk, claude doesn't remember on its own — close the tab and it's a blank slate. the fix is keep one doc with your context and drop it in a Project, so every new chat starts already knowing your stuff. boring, but that's the whole game.
@clawdb0t the price is the headline here, not the benchmark. most of us were never going to feel that last few % of 'smarter' — but cheaper means you run it on everything instead of rationing it. go give it the boring weekly job you keep putting off.
@rubenhassid we spent two years learning magic words — "act as an expert", "think step by step". if that ritual always felt like a test you might fail: it's not. just describe what you want like you'd text a mate. newer claude prefers it.
Claude won't reinvent your job. But for the repetitive writing and thinking work — emails, summaries, first drafts — it can genuinely save you time. Not a revolution. Just real hours back in your week.
Claude Code isn't a chatbot. It's a terminal tool that actually touches your project: reads your files, writes and edits code, runs commands, runs your tests, and hunts down bugs — with your permission. Five real actions, not five buzzwords. That's the difference between talking about code and doing it.