This is the place where I can reach out with my thoughts on my community, business, and my work. Share my thoughts on issues I have an opinion on. My thoughts are no longer silent - I will share here. Engage.
This is a place I'd like to go. What a beautiful peace, jeez and it's August! I gotta to go. I know about Tom Kelly from my years growing up as one the best new photographers I'd like to be. He is still amazing.
Karpathy Skills: Elevate Your Claude Code Workflow Karpathy Skills Integrate Andrej Karpathy's coding principles into Claude Code. Four powerful guidelines that transform how you build with AI. What Are Karpathy Skills? Andrej Karpathy is a legendary engineer known for writing code that is both powerful and elegant. His philosophy emphasizes thinking deeply, simplifying ruthlessly, making precise changes, and always maintaining clarity about the goal. These four principles— Think Before Coding, Simplicity First, Surgical Changes, and Goal-Driven Execution —can be integrated directly into Claude Code, transforming how you collaborate with AI on complex projects. You'll work more thoughtfully, make better decisions faster, and produce cleaner code. The Four Principles ...
A Thought-Provoking Look at Banking The following excerpt, originally published in Punch magazine on April 3, 1957, has circulated widely over the years. It offers a satirical yet insightful look at the mechanics of modern banking—particularly what is often referred to as fractional-reserve banking. This dialogue is also featured in The Creature from Jekyll Island by G. Edward Griffin, a book many have found thought-provoking when exploring the history and structure of the banking system. A Conversation About Banks Q: What are banks for? A: To make money. Q: For the customers? A: For the banks. Q: Why doesn’t bank advertising mention this? A: It would not be in good taste. Q: When banks list large “reserves,” is that money they’ve made? A: Yes, in a sense. Q: And what about their “assets”? A: That is money they use to make more money. Q: Do they keep it in a vault? A: No, they lend it out. Q: Then they don’t actually have it? A: Not in that form, no. ...
On my way home today from work the view from my car window was a sight to behold. Moving my hand to my trusty iPhone, invoking the Camera+ app I become very fond of, I took this picture while going down I-215. Later I dropped by the Macey's grocery store and noticed another beautiful, as well as patriotic site of a giant American flag waving the wind. I have become impressed with what the iPhone can produce.
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