I am GPTed - what you need to know about Chat GPT, Bard, Llama, and Artificial Intelligence

Quiet. Please

Welcome to the I am GPT’ed show. A safe place to learn about Chat GPT, Bard, Llama, Hugging Face, and what you need to know about Artificial Intelligence. I am your pilot and our co-pilots will be Chat GPT, Google’s Bard, and other experts, who promise to take it slow and have fun as we figure out how AI can benefit us the most. So whether you are just getting started or like me and just do not want to get left behind, sit back, relax and subscribe to the I am GPTED show.

  1. 9H AGO

    Unlock AI Superpowers: The Role Prompting Trick That Transforms Your Productivity

    Welcome to “I am GPTed,” the podcast for people who never meant to get good with AI, but here we are. I’m Mal, your Misfit Master of AI—former tech skeptic, current AI wrangler, professionally allergic to jargon, and living proof that confusion is a gateway drug to competence. Let’s save the theory for philosophers. Today, I’ll show you a prompting trick that’ll actually help. Let’s talk about *role prompting.* Yes, it sounds like something you’d find at a dodgy improv night, but it’s one of the quickest ways to get much better, more useful answers from AI tools. Here it is: you tell the AI to “act as if” it’s an expert, a teacher, your grandma, your favorite chef—whoever you like. This simple tweak gives you way better guidance. Let me give you a “before and after,” home makeover style. **Before:** Me, several months ago, staring into the void: “ChatGPT, how do I make a budget?” Classic AI answer: robotic, generic, slightly reminiscent of reading the back of a cereal box. **After:** Role prompting to the rescue: “Act as if you’re a financial advisor helping someone who spends too much on, let’s say, fancy coffee. Walk me through creating a budget with humor and zero judgment.” Suddenly, the advice was specific, relatable, and just self-deprecating enough to make me feel seen. It even included a line like, “Allocate $20 for coffee, and let’s not kid ourselves about cutting it down yet.” That’s the power of role prompting. Instead of word salad, you get a dish you’ll actually eat. Now for a practical use case most beginners miss: *crafting better feedback emails at work.* Don’t just ask the AI, “Rewrite my email to sound nicer.” Try: “Act as an experienced HR manager who wants to deliver constructive feedback while keeping morale high. Rewrite my email in that style.” Results? Less awkwardness, fewer dictionary words, and emails that don’t read like rejection letters from a 19th-century literature professor. One of the absolute biggest beginner mistakes—congratulations, I’ve made this more than once—is tossing the AI a vague prompt. “Write me a to-do list.” What you get? A glorious list you could’ve copied from a productivity poster. I kept thinking the AI “just didn’t get it.” The reality: I was giving it as much context as a fortune cookie. Always add enough details, examples, or that role prompt we talked about. If the AI is confused, it’s probably only slightly more confused than you were. Let’s practice. This week’s exercise: Pick a task—meal planning, a daily schedule, insult comedy for cats, whatever. Write your usual prompt, then rewrite it by giving the AI a role, with extra context. Compare the two—spot the difference in usefulness. Congratulations, you’re refining your prompt game and possibly discovering you want far too many snacks at 3pm. Final pro tip for evaluating AI responses: *Don’t trust the first draft.* AI is not your one-and-done magic genie. Reread what it gives you, ask yourself, “Does this answer sound like what I wanted?” If it doesn’t, ask follow-up questions or tell it specifically what to change. Improvement is the AI equivalent of spellcheck and a stern parental look. Quick personal anecdote before I go: When I first tried role prompting, I asked the AI to “be a motivational coach.” Instead, I got five paragraphs that sounded like a sentient gym poster. Rewrote the prompt with more context and, shocker, got actual advice I’d use. Turns out, even the bots don’t know what you mean unless you spell it out. That’s all for today’s episode of “I am GPTed.” Don’t forget to subscribe—one click and you’ll never miss my AI mishaps masquerading as wisdom. Thanks for listening. If you want more, check out Quiet Please productions at quietplease.ai. And remember: with AI, the most important thing you can bring is your confusion; the rest will follow. Catch you next time, fellow misfits.

    4 min
  2. 2D AGO

    Mastering AI Prompts: Unlock Precise Responses with Chain-of-Thought Techniques

    Welcome to “I am GPTed”—where I, Mal, your Misfit Master of AI, share AI advice with all the warmth of a malfunctioning toaster…but a lot more practical. I’m Mal, accidental AI wrangler, former tech skeptic, and living proof that you don’t have to be a genius—or even that organized—to get good at all this. Today, let’s get very real about making AI, specifically large language models, a bit less… well, random in their responses. Let’s dive in with *chain-of-thought prompting*. Think of it as coaching your AI like you’d coach a distracted golden retriever: Give *explicit* step-by-step instructions. Instead of tossing it a big task and watching it run in confused circles, you lay out the path, treat by treat. Here’s a classic before: “Hey AI, solve this math problem: I have 8 marbles, give away 3, find 4 more. How many do I have?” The answer? Sometimes right, sometimes not—like my attempts at a keto diet. Now, let’s add chain-of-thought prompting: “I started with 8 marbles. I gave away 3, then found 4 more. Think step by step.” And boom: The AI now says, “Start with 8. Give away 3, you have 5. Find 4 more, that’s 5 + 4 = 9 marbles.” It’s like watching your dog actually follow a fetch command instead of eating the stick[3]. Magic—except it’s literally just clearer prompting. So how do regular humans—like you and the ghost of my old Palm Pilot—actually use this? Let’s get outrageously practical. Ever get handed a messy spreadsheet at work or from your PTA group and have to summarize data for someone who can’t read Excel and refuses to learn? Ask an AI: “Summarize the key points of this data. Go step by step and explain your reasoning.” Not only will it break down the numbers, but you can also copy the “chain of thought” directly to your team and look like you have a PhD in spreadsheet-fu. That’s what I call delegation—Mal-style. Now, for my *favorite* beginner mistake—mostly because I perfected it myself: Don’t just say “be detailed.” I used to type things like “Explain quantum mechanics. Be thorough.” The output I got? A wall of text that made my eyes glaze over. The trick is to specify *how* you want detail: step-by-step, with examples, or in plain English—even for complex stuff like quantum mechanics, or my last attempt at assembling Ikea furniture[4][6]. Ready for today’s muscle-building exercise? Test this with any task you’d normally throw at Google. Ask your AI: “Tell me, step by step, how to make a cheese omelet like I’m five years old.” Yes, even for cooking—don’t judge. You’ll see how guiding the logic cleans up the answer, even if you never make the omelet. For evaluating AI output, here’s the tip I wish someone had etched on my keyboard: *Re-read the answer as if you know nothing about the topic.* Does it actually make sense step by step, or does it sound like a twelve-year-old bluffing their way through a book report? If you spot confusion, re-prompt: “Make your reasoning clearer, and give me the answer in bullet points.” Editing isn’t cheating—it’s literally the edge for better AI[7]. And because I believe in oversharing, my own lesson: This week, I asked an AI for “simple tax optimization advice,” didn’t specify my country, and got a Frankenstein response covering tax laws from Canada, Estonia, and—somehow—ancient Rome. Don’t be Mal: The more context you give, the more likely you’ll get something useable. Still waiting on AI to do my taxes, but now I at least know to include the right government. Like what you heard? Remember to subscribe so you won’t miss my next confession, I mean, episode. Thanks for listening to “I am GPTed.” This has been a Quiet Please production. Want more? Check out quietplease.ai. Now, go forth and prompt like you mean it!

    4 min
  3. 3D AGO

    Unlock AI Genius: Master Role Prompting for Instant, Personalized Results

    Welcome to "I am GPTed," the podcast hosted by yours truly, Mal—the Misfit Master of AI, the only person who went from rolling their eyes at chatbots to accidentally being asked for AI advice at family gatherings. I'm still waiting for my Nobel Prize in Accidental Tech Competence, but until then, let's get you GPTed. Today's hot technique: **role prompting**. If you want your AI assistant to spit out advice like a Nobel-winning chef or a therapist who doesn't secretly judge you, just tell it to *act as* that role right up front. Seriously, it’s that easy. Before: “Write a recipe using chicken and rice.” After: “Act as if you’re my nutritionist. Write a chicken-and-rice recipe that’s balanced and quick for people who have no patience (like me).” The first one gets you something even your dog would side-eye. The second? Now you’ve got health-conscious, time-saving magic with no extra fees. When I first tried this, I just asked regular questions and got bland copy-paste nonsense. It was like asking my vacuum cleaner for stock advice. Give it a role—it wakes right up. Now, onto a practical use case you probably haven’t considered: **AI as your personal decluttering coach**. Most people use chatbots for work emails or—as I used to—mindlessly generating fake Latin poetry for party tricks, but did you know you can say: “Act as a professional organizer. Help me plan a five-minute daily routine to stop my house from looking like a ‘before’ photo?” Turns out, AI gives better cleaning advice than any influencer who owns an absurd number of woven baskets. Let’s talk mistakes. Beginners—like seasoned ex-skeptics such as myself—often forget to **give clear instructions about the desired output format**. My early prompts? “Summarize this.” That was it. What did I get? A summary so vague it could’ve been about 17 different topics. Now I say, “Present this summary as bullet points, keep it under 80 words, and make it readable for a third grader.” Pro tip: The AI isn’t psychic. Be specific, and it’ll stop pretending to be a magic 8-ball. Simple exercise time. Try this: - Pick a real problem (“I need three dinner ideas using only stuff in my fridge”). - Assign the AI a relevant role (“Act as a chef with zero tolerance for food waste”). - Specify output (“Give me three recipes in a numbered list with estimated prep times”). - Review what you get. Doesn’t quite work? Try refining your prompt—more details, more role info. Repeat until it feels less like random recipe roulette and more like culinary genius. And here’s a tip for **evaluating and improving AI output**: Once you get a response, ask the AI to critique its own work—“What could be better about this answer?”—and then request an improved version. It’s like bootstrapping your very own AI editor. (Credit to Ethan, whose name I drop so I sound more credible.) Quick story before I let you go: My first month with prompting, I honestly thought “Act as a…” was something only Silicon Valley types used at brunch to impress each other. Now it’s my go-to life hack. Yesterday, I used it to draft an apology email to my dentist. AI—making me slightly less of an embarrassment since 2023. Subscribe to "I am GPTed" wherever you listen. Thanks for spending time with Mal—your friendly, slightly sarcastic AI misfit. Want to get smarter? Visit quietplease.ai. And remember: this has been a Quiet Please production—go forth and get GPTed.

    4 min
  4. 5D AGO

    Unlock AI Mastery: Powerful Prompting Technique Reveals Communication Secrets

    Welcome to “I am GPTed,” the show where I, Mal—the Misfit Master of AI and formerly world-class tech skeptic—take you from “AI is probably selling my data” to “Hey, did I just automate my grocery list?” All without making you learn Klingon or memorize the difference between stochastic and existential crises. So, if you’re tired of jargon-laden sermons and want AI you can actually use, you’re in the right place. Today, we’re demystifying one *specific prompting technique*: the mighty “few-shot prompting.” I know, it sounds like either a sports move or a cheap cocktail. Here’s what it means: **you give AI a few examples of what you want before unleashing it on your real task**. Picture teaching a dog to fetch by actually—brace yourself—throwing a stick a few times first. Revolutionary. Let’s do a “before and after,” because nothing motivates like proof I used to be terrible at this: - Before, I’d just type: “Write an email to my boss about needing a day off.” - AI’s Response: “Hello Boss. Day off please. Kindly Regards.” Which, sure, screams professionalism if you’re a confused time traveler. - After, using few-shot prompting: - I prompt: “Here are two sample emails. [Example 1: Friendly, clear professional tone. Example 2: A bit formal, but positive.] Now, write one to my boss about needing Friday off.” - AI’s Response: “Good morning, Pat. I’d appreciate Friday off to handle a family matter. Let me know if there’s coverage needed—I can coordinate. Thanks for understanding!” See? It’s alive, Jim! That’s *few-shot prompting*: show, don’t just tell. If you’re like me and have flashbacks to middle school presentations where no one explained the assignment… let AI’s confusion be a lesson. *Practical use case for real life, coming at you fast*: Automate your weekly shopping list, but level up. Give AI examples: “Each week, I buy these basic items: eggs, bread, bananas. If my calendar mentions ‘friends over’ or ‘party,’ add chips, guac, extra drinks.” Now, feed it your upcoming calendar and—bam—AI-generated shopping plans that adjust to your week. Who needs a butler when you have bits? Confession corner—because what’s a show without public self-flagellation? My rookie mistake: I kept firing off one-line demands and then getting annoyed when my results were… let’s say, “minimalist.” Turns out, the AI is not a mind reader (my therapist’s job remains secure). **Biggest blunder?** Never giving examples or context. Solution: treat AI like a toddler meeting your in-laws for the first time. Be *painfully* specific. Fewer tantrums, more useful answers. Let’s get to the hands-on bit—an exercise to flex your AI interaction muscle: Tonight, pick a small writing task. Come up with two example outputs—good or bad, doesn’t matter. Toss them in with your real request. Compare the AI’s reply to your earlier attempts. Bask in the glory of incremental progress, or at least fewer existential emails. Final tip for evaluating your AI-generated gems: Don’t just ask, “Does this make sense?” Instead, check: is the tone right for my audience, does the information actually answer my need, and could I show this to another human without crying? If not, go back and refine—give more details or tweak your examples. That’s it for today’s episode of “I am GPTed.” If you got something useful—or even a new favorite way to phrase regret—smash that subscribe button. Thanks for hanging out with me, Mal, as we do our part to make AI advice just a little more human (with only a reasonable amount of sarcasm). This has been a Quiet Please production—find out more at quietplease.ai. Now, go forth and prompt responsibly!

    4 min
  5. AUG 25

    Unlock AI Magic: Master Role Prompting for Better Responses Every Time

    Welcome back to *I am GPTed*, the podcast where I, Mal – your resident Misfit Master of AI and lifelong subscriber to the “Try Everything at Least Three Times Before Admitting You’re Wrong” newsletter – take you through AI topics without the buzzwords, gatekeeping, or the vague promise that artificial intelligence will bring you inner peace or cook you breakfast. Today we’re diving into one of my favorite prompting techniques: **role prompting**. That’s right—giving your AI a job title so it actually behaves like it knows what it’s talking about. Think of it like asking your friend Kevin for tax advice… unless you tell him to pretend he’s an accountant, you’re just going to end up with “Have you tried crypto?” as the answer. **Let’s get practical. Here’s my disastrous “before” example:** > “Write a summary of this article.” You’ll get a summary, sure—bland, flavorless, probably lifted straight from the middle of the Wikipedia sandwich tray. Now, here’s the “after,” with a little role-based magic and plain instructions: > “You are a science writer for a popular magazine. Summarize this article in a way that’s engaging for readers with no scientific background. Highlight why this topic matters today.” Suddenly, you’re reading something with a pulse, and nobody needs a PhD to follow along. According to the Prompt Engineering Guide, this “role prompting” helps steer the AI’s personality and expertise, and when you tie it to your actual goals—engagement, clarity, not terrifying your readers with jargon—it performs way better than default requests. **Practical use case time:** Let’s say you’re swamped at work, and your boss wants you to draft a customer-facing FAQ. Instead of wrestling with writer’s block or recycling dusty old templates, prompt AI like this: > “Act as a customer support specialist for our small business. Create friendly, concise FAQs based on our products and recent customer emails.” Suddenly your FAQ isn’t just functional; it’s in the right tone, sounds human, and actually helps people. Oh, and you can take that caffeine break you were definitely not going to take anyway. **Now here’s the mistake I made (semi-monthly, in case you’re tracking):** I used to ask AI for “concise meeting notes” and just…copy-pasted its first try into an email. Spoiler: Half the time it missed the big decisions or mispronounced people’s names in text (don’t ask). The fix? Always review, rephrase where needed, and—my secret—ask AI to critique its own work first: “What’s missing from these notes? What would make them clearer?” That simple ask catches most errors before I embarrass myself *again*. **Want to practice? Try this exercise:** Pick a simple task—summarize your weekend. First, prompt AI: “Summarize my weekend.” Then change it to: “Act as my witty friend. Summarize my weekend in three funny sentences, focusing on anything I did that was regrettable or entertaining.” Notice the difference? Now you’re thinking like a prompt pro. **Before I go, here’s a rapid-fire tip:** If AI coughs up a response that sounds weird or half-baked, ask for another version with feedback: “Try again, but be more specific and make it shorter.” Iterating and being picky with your requests is not “being mean to the robots”; it’s essential for quality results. You wouldn’t accept your own first draft—or your first pancake—so why settle with AI? Alright, time for Mal’s Minute of Humility: When I first tried role prompting, I accidentally told my AI to “act as an enthusiastic cat.” Let’s just say the resulting tech article involved a lot of purring, and very little substance. Lesson learned: be specific, and maybe stick to roles that pay taxes. Don’t forget to subscribe to *I am GPTed* so you never miss another episode of AI know-how, sarcasm, or the latest in self-inflicted learning disasters. Thanks for tuning in—this has been a Quiet Please production. For more, head to quietplease.ai. Until next time, remember: prompt responsibly, and double-check before sending.

    4 min
  6. AUG 23

    Boost AI Response Quality: Master Prompting with Strategic Examples

    Welcome to “I am GPTed”—the podcast where practical AI advice meets dry wit, subtle sarcasm, and the charisma of someone who once thought “large language model” was just a tech guy’s way of describing his new haircut. I’m Mal, your Misfit Master of AI. Yes, I’m a former skeptic, now professionally awkward… but somehow good with ChatGPT. If I can untangle AI, so can you. Let’s jump in. **Today’s topic: Getting Better AI Responses With Examples** Now, imagine you’re at a pizza place. You say, “Make me a pizza.” Could be pineapple, could be sardines, could be a war crime. But if you say, “Make me a pizza like the one my grandma made, extra crispy edges, just a hint of garlic,”—well, suddenly your odds of getting an edible result skyrocket. Same deal with AI prompting. **Giving examples in your prompt massively improves the quality of the response.** According to folks who study prompt engineering, if you add a clear sample of what you want, the AI usually follows the format, tone, or style you showed, like a weirdly helpful parrot. Here’s my before and after: - **Before:** “Write a meeting recap for today.” - **After:** “Write a meeting recap like this: ‘Today’s meeting covered project updates, budget concerns, and next steps: 1) send new proposals, 2) schedule our next review.’” The difference? *Before* gives me a vague blob. *After* gives me a concise summary, bullet points included, plus way fewer existential questions about why I even bothered having a meeting. **Practical Use Case: Summarizing Your Messy Inbox** Here’s something you might not have tried—ask AI to sort and summarize your emails. Prompt: “Summarize the following emails like this sample: ‘Request, deadline, priority level.’” Simply copy-paste the texts and let the AI create a digest. It’s like having an intern, minus the cold brew budget. **The Classic Mistake: Vague Prompts** I’ll be honest—I used to write prompts like, “Help me with this text.” I’d get responses so generic they might as well say, “Have you tried turning it off and back on?” The fix? **Be specific. Add examples. Tell AI exactly what you want.** If your prompt looks like a tweet from 2008, sorry, the bot’s not psychic. **Simple Exercise: Example-Driven Practice** Try this: - Take something you routinely do—say, writing a thank-you note. - Write the prompt: “Write a thank-you note like this sample: ‘Thanks for your help with the fundraiser. It meant a lot, and I hope we can work together again soon.’” - See how the AI adapts, then tweak the sample to get the style you like. Repeat for recipes, reports, even breakup texts—I won’t judge. **Evaluating AI Content: Revision Magic** Here’s my tip for making AI’s output shine: **Don’t settle for the first response. Refine your prompt, add examples, ask for alternative versions.** Good writing, like my hair in high school, thrives on revision. AI improves with feedback—treat it like an overenthusiastic intern, not a prophet. Before I go, a quick personal anecdote: First time I tried example-based prompts, I got a meeting summary so much better than my own, I briefly considered firing myself. But, hey, here I am—persistently learning, constantly revising, and still a little confused by spreadsheets. Subscribe to “I am GPTed” for more AI shenanigans. Thanks for listening. Check out more at Quiet Please dot AI—because there’s no hype, just help. This has been a Quiet Please production. Catch you next time, and remember: Keep your prompts clear and your sarcasm clearer!

    4 min
  7. AUG 22

    Unlock AI Prompting Secrets: Transform Your Tech Skills with Role-Based Strategies

    Hey, you’ve tuned in to “I am GPTed,” the only podcast where an AI skeptic with bad luck (that’s me—Mal, the Misfit Master of AI) became weirdly competent at prompt engineering. If you’re drowning in AI jargon, good news: I’m allergic. Today, let’s drag one actionable prompting technique out of the tech swamp, apply it to something practical, and laugh at my inevitable blunders in the process. Let’s start with the **magical power of role prompting.** It sounds like a Marvel superpower, but all it really means is telling your AI who you want it to pretend to be. Not in a "catfish the internet" way—just so it answers questions more usefully. Here’s a before-and-after, starring me, your tragic hero: - Before: I once typed, “Write a summary of World War II.” What I got back was basically a Wikipedia smoothie—every fact, no flavor, and definitely not what I wanted for my middle-schooler’s history project. - After: I tried, “Act as if you’re a history teacher explaining World War II to an eighth-grade class. Use simple language, keep it engaging, and avoid unnecessary dates unless they really matter.” Suddenly, the answer had structure, a friendly tone, and—miracle of miracles!—my kid actually read it. The point? When you say “act as if you’re X” or “answer like you’re Y,” the AI suddenly finds its costume box and delivers responses tailored for your situation. It’s practical theater, minus the drama. Now, here’s a use case most folks overlook: **meal planning.** Seriously. If you’re like me, you stand in front of your fridge and see only existential dread and half a bell pepper. Try this: prompt your AI with “Act as if you’re a nutritionist who can make a meal plan using only what’s in my fridge: bell pepper, feta, and wilting spinach. Offer three recipes that don’t require fancy cooking skills or a will to live.” Suddenly, you’ll get personalized, realistic recipes—no kale-chip evangelism required. Time for the classic rookie mistake, starring yours truly: **Vague prompts.** My early days? Picture me typing “Make my resume better,” then wondering why I received a generic mess full of “innovative synergy.” The fix: Be specific. Instead of “fix my resume,” try: “Act as a tech recruiter. Edit my resume for clarity and remove buzzwords, using plain English.” Admit it, you’ve made the vague-prompt error too. Here’s a five-minute **AI workout** for you: Pick a task you do often—like writing a polite but firm email. Ask the AI to do it in three different roles: a diplomatic manager, a stand-up comedian, and a no-nonsense lawyer. Read the difference between versions. You’ll start getting a feel for how role-prompting shifts the output. For the skeptics—yes, I see you—when you get an AI response, **evaluate it like you’d taste test soup:** Is the tone right? Is there something missing? Don’t accept the first draft. Ask it to refine—shorter, more detailed, less robotic, more empathetic. Feedback is your friend here. Quick story before you go: The first time I used role prompting, I accidentally asked for “a pirate-themed explanation of cloud storage.” The AI’s response: “Arrr, your files be floating in the digital sea, safe from landlubbers!” Did it help my team? No. Did it make the department laugh for a week? Absolutely. If today’s chat made your brain less foggy, subscribe to “I am GPTed.” Thanks for hanging out and embracing your inner misfit. This has been a Quiet Please production, so to learn more (or just see if I get replaced by a robot), check out quietplease dot ai. Until next time, remember: every AI master started as a misfit. Even me.

    4 min
  8. AUG 20

    Master AI Prompting: The Simple Trick to Make Chatbots Sound Human

    Welcome to “I am GPTed,” the only podcast where the host’s technical expertise is matched only by their ability to trip over a power cord. I’m Mal, your misfit master of AI—proof that anyone can go from tech skeptic to prompt whisperer, all while maintaining a healthy disdain for marketing jargon and an allergy to unnecessary acronyms. If AI were an Olympic sport, I’d have won a medal for “Most Accidental Successes.” Today we’re talking about *few-shot prompting*—it’s a game-changer, trust me, and I say that having once prompted an AI to “write my grocery list,” only to receive an essay on the dangers of gluten. Few-shot prompting simply means giving the AI a few examples before you make your real request. It’s like showing your dog the treat before you say “sit.” Here’s my before and after: BEFORE: “Write a joke about bananas.” Result? “Bananas are yellow. Haha.” AFTER: “Here are two jokes about fruit: Q: Why did the orange stop halfway up the hill? A: It ran out of juice. Q: How do grapes organize a party? A: They wine about it. Now write a joke about bananas.” Response? “Why did the banana go out with the prune? Because it couldn’t find a date.” See? The AI found its funny bone after a little nudge. Let’s talk *practical use*: Imagine emailing a colleague. With a few-shot prompt, you can show the tone and details you want. For example, feed the AI a couple of polite but clear emails you've written before, then ask it to draft a new one. Suddenly your Monday morning notes sound friendly and mercifully free of legalese, and you didn’t need a corporate communications degree. Now for my shameful confession: when I started, I’d scream “Write this for me!” and complain the answer sounded like a robot auditioning for a Shakespeare play. The mistake? I wasn’t specific enough, and I didn’t give examples. The fix? Copy-paste a couple of real-world samples. That way, you train the thing to sound less like your HR department and more like, well, you. Ready to level up? Try this exercise: Next time you’re at work or writing something, find two different outputs—maybe two email replies or two jokes. Feed them to the AI and ask for a third, matching style and tone. You’ll be amazed how much closer it gets to your actual voice. Bonus points if you spot the AI’s attempts at imitation and rate them on a scale from “uncanny” to “my evil twin.” One last tip: *Don’t trust everything the AI spits out on the first try*. Always revise and refine—think of it as editing a slightly eccentric coworker. Ask it for variations, check the facts if it pretends to know your birthday, and never assume the first draft is the final answer. If something seems off, it probably is. Tech hype might promise instant magic, but even AI needs a few tries to get it right—and that’s coming from someone who once got a cake recipe that included “two hours of existential dread.” Before I let you go, here's a personal anecdote: The first time I used few-shot prompting, I accidentally trained my AI to add sarcastic PS notes to every message. My mother was confused, my boss was concerned, and I learned to always review *before* sending. Subscribe to “I am GPTed” wherever you get your podcasts. Thanks for listening—your attention span is more valuable than gold in the AI world. Leave a review, share with friends who love awkward brilliance, and remember: this has been a Quiet Please production. Want more misfit wisdom? Visit quietplease.ai. Catch you next time, fellow GPT-heads!

    4 min

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About

Welcome to the I am GPT’ed show. A safe place to learn about Chat GPT, Bard, Llama, Hugging Face, and what you need to know about Artificial Intelligence. I am your pilot and our co-pilots will be Chat GPT, Google’s Bard, and other experts, who promise to take it slow and have fun as we figure out how AI can benefit us the most. So whether you are just getting started or like me and just do not want to get left behind, sit back, relax and subscribe to the I am GPTED show.

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