Weekly Dose of the Internet Diet #1

Here's everything I found tickling my curiosity this week. This email consists of all cherry picks I would usually share on DMs with friends. But now I'm doing this in public.

Hello there,

I consume plenty of internet on social media and I want to share this with you. Most of the new ideas I find are on Twitter, and people think that Twitter is always like politics, Elon Musk, and Trump, and all of that noise. But if you have a really good followers list and you train your algorithm, your feed is usually a goldmine.

Hope this makes you laugh or think.

I’ve been using Claude Code for almost a week now. It’s too addictive and it can do a lot of things.

Here’s my usage so far:

I think the guy forgot Teflon which my dad and me have for sure 🫠 

Apple is one of few brands that gets hated for doing anything all the time.

Mckay is once again ahead of the curve, dropping a ready-to-use boilerplate to jumpstart your Claude Code experiments. If you haven’t checked out Mckay yet, now’s the perfect time—he’s always quick to spot new AI trends, master them, and then break down his process in clear, actionable videos. His approach makes it easy to stay informed and sharpen your own workflow.

If you like staying ahead with the latest apps—especially browsers—here’s a new one worth your attention. Created by the team behind Arc browser, they’ve just launched their own AI-powered browser, which I’ve started testing this week. It’s a fresh approach to browsing, and I’m curious to see how it changes my workflow.

This audiobook is now at the top of my list. I usually start with audio, then buy the Kindle if it’s worth a deeper dive. I always pay attention when Nassim Taleb recommends something—his contrarian take is a refreshing break from internet groupthink. Recently, I also listened to Peter Attia’s “Outlive,” so I’m curious to see how his ideas stack up against Taleb’s.

Apple really missed the mark with its reactions feature, especially during meetings on Chrome. That persistent pop-up nagging you to enable reactions is more nuisance than help. Fortunately, someone has figured out a way to disable it—just run a simple terminal command and reclaim your focus.

If you haven’t seen the practical uses for 3D printers, here’s a great example.

Hope you enjoyed these curiosity-driven finds from X. If you liked this edition, feel free to share it with anyone who might appreciate it.

Looking forward to sharing more next week!

Cheers,

Jaunius

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