Uyu muhombe uyu,
Zimbabwe is blessed with brilliant minds. ๐ฟ๐ผ This remarkable innovator has developed an automated machine that opens the chicken house every morning, dispenses feed, and provides water to the chicks without human intervention. A true testament to Zimbabwean ingenuity, innovation, and the limitless potential of our people.
๐จAnthropic 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 AN HOUR OF NETFLIX TONIGHT.
This 1 hour Stanford lecture by Joel Peterson will teach you more about negotiation and getting what you want than most people learn in years.
Bookmark it and give it an hour, no matter what.
Anthropic CEO:
"There are jobs that took generations to build that may disappear."
One of the best interviews I've seen in a long time.
31 minutes of pure insight from the man running a $965B company.
The whole economy splits in two: people who use AI, and people who get replaced by those who do.
This isn't a forecast, it's already happening and you can't adapt while ignoring it.
Watch it, then read the guide on Claude features that 99% of users don't know exist below.
๐งโ๐ฌ๐ก Spotlighting African Inventions
๐ฆ๐ฌ The 'Matibabu' Device, which diagnoses malaria quickly without drawing blood, was invented in ๐บ๐ฌ Uganda, one of ARIPOโs Member States.
๐จโ๐ปโจ Invented by Ugandan engineer Brian Gitta and his team, this device highlights the African spirit of innovation! ๐๐
Learn how you can protect a patent here:๐https://t.co/O1grpQ3EbB
Read more on the story here:๐https://t.co/vWWWSRHYvh
This is why smart people rarely build businesses
Jensen Huang stood in front of a room of Stanford graduates and told them he hopes they suffer.
He wasn't being cruel. He was being precise.
His argument: people with very high expectations have very low resilience. And resilience, not intelligence, is what decides who actually makes it. A Stanford grad has spent their whole life as the smartest person in the room. They've rarely been tested by real failure. So when something finally breaks, they break with it.
Then he said the line every founder should sit with: "Greatness is not intelligence. Greatness comes from character. And character isn't formed out of smart people, it's formed out of people who suffered."
He would know. At nine, Huang was scrubbing toilets at a Kentucky boarding school his family hadn't realized was a reform school. As a teenager he bussed tables at Denny's. In 1993 he started NVIDIA in a Denny's booth, and nearly lost it more than once in the years that followed. The character was built decades before the valuation showed up.
This is why he uses the words "pain and suffering" inside NVIDIA with what he calls great glee. He isn't trying to shield his best people from the hard part. He's trying to give it to them on purpose.
Talent gets you into the room. The people who stay are the ones who were broken once and learned they could rebuild.
This is the video I was talking about.
A president that went for other matters in the UK...but stopped to visit Ghanaian shops, he stopped to check on his people, see how they're faring.
Messi is always scanning the pitch. ๐๐
His awareness, vision, and understanding of space are on another level.
Watch this video till the end and you'll see exactly why Messi is constantly looking around the pitch before receiving the ball. ๐ฅ๐ฆ๐ท
High cortisol is the real reason you wake up at 3-4 AM.
It also shaves 5 years off your life โ tanks testosterone, locks belly fat, literally shrinks your brain.
If I wanted to fix it without medication, here are 8 things I'd do every day:
1. No food 3 hours before bed.