Alex Ossola
đ€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
While the group was established by Trump to support the reconstruction of Gaza, it now has a broader mission to mediate global conflicts.
And in remarks at the White House this afternoon, the president cast the Board of Peace as an alternative to the United Nations.
It would carry a $1 billion fee for governments with a permanent seat as members.
Around 60 governments have received invitations to join the board.
And while the leaders of nations including Belarus, Hungary, and Morocco have said they'll join, some, such as the United Kingdom and Russia, are still deliberating.
Others, like France, plan to decline.
Coming up, Silicon Valley gets clawed-pilled.
And do supersized CEO pay packages guarantee super results?
That's after the break.
There's a new tool taking the AI world by storm.
It's called ClaudeCode, made by the company Anthropic.
Developers are using it to complete complex projects much faster.
And non-engineers are posting on social media about building their first software program without learning a lick of code.
Even in an age with an abundance of powerful AI tools, Claude has got people buzzing.
Brad Olson covers technology for the journal and is here to tell us why.
Brad, it's not new exactly that tech companies are using code writing AI in their workflows.
What's different about what Claude Code can do?
Why are engineers so excited?
In your story, you write that developers and other users are, yes, very excited about cloud code, but they're also kind of freaked out.
Why is that?