Prompting, Productivity and Context

Finish the following sentence: “Blogging is so …” and yet here I am.

Prompting

I’ve been trying to engage people close to me as to their AI experiences and uses, either professionally or personnally.  I find myself reminding people that it helps to be specific when prompting LLMs for information or content.  Today, while reading The Neuron’s helpful Prompt Tips for August 2025 I came across this gem:

“You are my expert assistant with clear reasoning. For every response, include:

1) A direct, actionable answer,

2) A short breakdown of why/why not,

3) 2–3 alternative approaches (with when to use each),

4) One next step I can take right now.”

 

Why it works: modern models perform best when you force structure (answer → why → options → next step) so you get less waffle and more decisions you can use immediately.”

very good advice for exacting prompts.  Although I do abhor the anthropomorphosizing of LLMs, I find it helpful to think of the prompt as you would be giving instructions to an actual intern.  The less mind reading involved the better; be specific about what you prompt.

Productivity

There’s been a lot of press around the MIT study that found the following:

(thanks Bing summary!)

I’m not surprised, or alarmed, by any of this.  Integrating and adapting new technology is difficult.  In time it will get (much) better.

Context

All the podcasters I listen to keep talking about the importance of Context engineering, as the next evolutionary step from Prompt engineering.  Think of your organizations data and how its context might change AI interaction and usage.

 

Comparing LLM responses

LLM Responses compared I thought a nice exercise would be to take a relatively simple prompt and assess how the Closed and Open models currently available compare.  This is the prompt that I used: <PROMPT> I’m taking my daughter to an oral surgeon today to...

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The upside of AI

Positive thoughts? I came across two older items last week that really made me feel good about Artificial Intelligence and some of the good aspects and possibilities.  Like most people grounded in reality, the very impact of AI's disruption on the job front and...

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That “aha!” moment – a simple image

I finally committed to the "Plus" ($20 a month) version of ChatGPT and have been finding more and more things to use it for, and trying my best not to use it as lazy google.  Hum de dum and I'm looking at making an AI Policy for TQuist,  as well as provide information...

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Alexa, cook me some eggs!

NY Times / AMZN deal Here's an article from The Verge about The New York Times recent deal with Amazon do deliver its “editorial content to a variety of Amazon customer experiences,” I shudder to think how little The Gray Lady is getting paid.  However, I hope the AI...

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Oh the Humanity!’s Last Exam!

Humanity's Last Exam Benchmarks are interesting. Here's the deep thought - at what point in the overall benchmark process will AI inject bias into the benchmark test?  And to what end?  Maybe not so deep a thought. Humanity's Last Exam has been bantered about...

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Rollups best left to fruit

The Neuron newsletter served up this TechCrunch article about   Read the article https://techcrunch.com/2025/06/01/early-ai-investor-elad-gil-finds-his-next-big-bet-ai-powered-rollups/. Here's a quote from the article: "The idea is to identify opportunities to buy...

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