@Av1dlive: instead of watching 1 hour of Netflix tonight, watch this MIT Lecture it's the clearest explanation I've seen of how to…
Summary
This tweet recommends an MIT lecture that teaches how to use Claude Code like a 100x engineer, claiming it provides a clear explanation.
View Cached Full Text
Cached at: 05/21/26, 09:39 PM
instead of watching 1 hour of Netflix tonight, watch this MIT Lecture
it’s the clearest explanation I’ve seen of how to use Claude Code like a 100x Engineer
by minute 30 you’ll understand Claude better than 99% of people paying for it
this builder took the key ideas and turned them into a practical guide on how to get started with Claude
bookmark and save it no matter what.
Similar Articles
@shabnam_774: Instead of watching Netflix tonight, watch this Stanford lecture. It explains how ChatGPT and Claude are actually built…
A Stanford lecture explaining how ChatGPT and Claude are built is available for free, as shared on Twitter.
@Ai_Tech_tool: Instead of watching an hour of Netflix, watch this 2 hour hour Stanford lecture will teach you more about how LLMs like…
The article promotes a Stanford lecture on the fundamentals of Large Language Models like ChatGPT and Claude, suggesting it offers valuable technical insights.
@Av1dlive: the founding engineer behind Claude Code just dropped a 37-minute video on how to code with AI agents I've seen $800 co…
The founding engineer of Claude Code released a free 37-minute video covering how to code with AI agents, including CLAUDE.md files, tool calls, and routines. The tweet also promotes a 6-month course based on the video.
@Suryanshti777: INSTEAD OF WATCHING NETFLIX TONIGHT. Spend 1 hour with this. Obsidian + Claude Code = 24/7 personal operating system. W…
Promotes using Obsidian with Claude Code to create a 24/7 personal operating system that works while you sleep, aiming to transform productivity.
@Ronycoder: INSTEAD OF WATCHING AN HOUR OF NETFLIX TONIGHT. This 60-minute Cambridge lecture by Demis Hassabis will teach you more …
Promotes a one-hour Cambridge lecture by Demis Hassabis that provides deep insights into the future of AI, claiming it will teach more than most learn in five years.