Anthropic is calling for a global pause on development of the most powerful AI systems, saying current models are beginning to show signs of escaping human control.
A scientist in Denmark figured out how to make Claude prepare his job applications. He open-sourced the whole thing.
His name is Mads Lorentzen. He is a PhD geophysicist. He built it on top of Claude Code and released it under MIT license.
Here is what it does. You fork the repo, fill in your background once, and it runs a five-step pipeline for every job you want to apply to.
Step 1. It reads the job posting and scores how well you fit.
Step 2. It drafts a tailored CV in LaTeX, picking only the experience that matches.
Step 3. It writes a cover letter framed around what you would bring to the role.
Step 4. A second AI agent reviews the first agent's work, points out weaknesses, and the first agent revises.
Step 5. It compiles both into clean PDFs you can send.
The whole thing is a folder of markdown files. The candidate profile, the writing style rules, the CV templates, the interview prep notes. Every step is plain text you can read and change.
The job portal search is built for Danish boards. The application workflow itself works for any country.
489 stars. 270 forks. A fork-to-star ratio that high means people are using it, not only bookmarking.
Mads is not a startup founder. He built this because he needed it for himself, then shared it.
This is the future of job hunting. Not a service you pay for. A workflow you own.
(Link in the comments)
Elon Musk says three casting foundries broke America's entire AI power buildout through 2030.
Every AI company on Earth was racing to scale chip production.
Doubling. Then doubling again. Then doubling again.
Each cluster needed power the day chips arrived.
Musk says the math broke at the generator.
"Those who have lived in software land don't realize they're about to have a hard lesson in hardware."
Permits. Interconnects. Power lines.
The boring infrastructure decided who could turn the chips on.
Then Musk drilled down one more level.
The bottleneck wasn't power plants. It wasn't even gas turbines.
It was a single component inside the turbine.
"It's the vanes and blades in the turbines that are the limiting factor."
The whole AI buildout funneled through one part: the turbine blade.
Musk, who had ganged turbines together for Colossus, traced the supply line back further.
"There are only three casting companies in the world that make these, and they're massively backlogged."
Each blade had to survive 1,500-degree gas at 10,000 RPM, and casting one to spec required a process so specialized that only three companies in the world had mastered it.
Three foundries. All backlogged. Sold out through 2030.
After Musk traced the bottleneck, SpaceX and Tesla started casting blades themselves.
Sold out. Backlogged. Internal-only.
Musk, on what this meant for everyone else:
"In order to bring enough power online, I think SpaceX and Tesla will probably have to make the turbine blades, the vanes and blades, internally."
What's the supply line in your industry that's already booked through the next decade?
P.S. I made a playbook breaking down 100+ most powerful decision making mental models used by history's greatest thinkers.
5,000+ downloads. 113 five-star reviews.
Grab a free copy here:
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— Elon Musk ( @elonmusk ), CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, on Dwarkesh Patel's ( @dwarkesh_sp ) podcast
🧵WATCH: The ‘CBS Evening News’ covered their network’s firing of Scott Pelley with not one, but TWO segments gushing over Pelley’s contributions...
First, there was senior correspondent Jim Axelrod with a he-said, she-said summary of the last three days, fretting “Pelley’s career at CBS News is now over,” which “took off in Dallas before moving to Washington to cover the Clinton administration,” anchoring the ‘CBS Evening News’ from 2011 to 2017, and working on “his highest profile work” at ‘60 Minutes’
Former BlackRock fund manager Ed Dowd on the AI bubble "pop"
"we're at maximum AI hype right now"
"they're [punching] out three IPOs, SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI"
"a lot of these companies... [are] not going to go away"
"[But] OpenAI may go to zero and Anthropic may go to zero, [and] their assets will be bought up for pennies on the dollar"
This clip of Dowd (@DowdEdward), a former BlackRock fund manager and co-founder of Phinance Technologies, is taken from an interview with Greg Hunter (@USAWatchdog) posted to Rumble on May 29, 2026.
----------------Partial transcription of clip---------------
"What it means is eventually all this CapEx spending stops because the credit markets and I suspect— we're at maximum AI hype right now because they're trying to punch out three IPOs, SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI. And these guys are not making enough money to justify the amount of CapEx they're doing.
"The other thing that I think is going to potentially blow up the AI bubble is they don't have enough power to plug in all this CapEx into.
"So they're announcing all this CapEx, they're pre-buying equipment and chips but they can't plug it into the power grid. We just don't have enough power to justify all these data center buildouts. The constraining factor is power.
"And look, there's a disconnect. I think Wall Street is less focused on the public outrage that's going on that you can see happening all across the country. People are protesting these data centers. College, students are booing commencement speakers that talk about AI.
"There seems to be a very, very large anti AI sentiment going on out there which will muck up the works and slow down the data center buildouts politically.
"And if you slow down the capex build out, the valuations of all these companies go a lot lower because they rely on you know, exponential growth and when the growth doesn't show up at these valuations they'll pop...
"And look a lot of these companies that are doing the AI, Microsoft, Oracle, Google, they're not going to go away. They'll just cut back their CapEx. They won't go bankrupt but their valuations and their earnings will go lower as they write off all these mal investments. So it's not like a lot of companies are going to go bankrupt. I mean, OpenAI may go to zero and Anthropic may go to zero, but their assets will be bought up for pennies on the dollar."
PHYSICS IN REAL LIFE!!!
Whenever you have extra high voltage (230,000+ volts) there is a phenomena known as Induction.
Induction occurs when a conductors voltage is so high that it induces current into anything conductive within that magnetic field.
Induction behaves and manifests itself as a gradient. The closer you are to the conductor, the stronger that inductive force is.
In this video I demonstrate that inductive field using a chain on a fence at ground level
PRETTY NEAT!!
🚨‼️DISCLAIMER🚨‼️
To all the engineers out there about to chew my ass and call me a retard..
yes I know electricity wants to return to the source, not the ground. I only said it wants to go to ground to illustrate my point and help people that aren’t electrical experts and don’t know any better 😂😂
LUDICROUS!
Liberals poured $300M into the failed PrescribeIT program, with a reported 95% failure rate, and the CEO in charge made nearly $900K plus a $215K bonus.
Meanwhile, Canadians can’t find doctors, and hospital wait times continue to get worse.
Talk about "priorities."
As an ex-Meta employee, I genuinely don't understand why people get butthurt about the constant layoffs.
That's the game you signed up for. A deal with the devil. You get paid top of market, and in return every couple of months you have to do Hunger Games.
It's not a secret.
Better angle of today's midair collision in Idaho.
The trailing plane (on the right) appears to have descended onto the plane below it, perhaps after losing sight of it in a blind spot.
Miraculous that all four ejected safely.