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The AI Advantage

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39 contributions to The AI Advantage
Hi everyone, I know I'm not the only one who's been banging my head against the wall trying to fix re-asking the same questions to different AIs and getting different answers every time.
After a lot of trial and error, I think I've finally found a simple fix. I wanted to share it in case it's helpful for anyone else (it should cost less than $10/m): Here's the simple guide: 1. First, create a quick Google Sheet with 5 columns: "Question," "ChatGPT," "Claude," "Gemini," "Winner + Why." 2. Next, whenever you get conflicting answers, paste all three responses and mark which one was actually right or most useful. 3. Finally, after 2 weeks, you'll start seeing clear patterns—like "Claude wins for creative writing," "GPT wins for code debugging," "Gemini wins for research summaries." The problem I kept hitting: asking ChatGPT something, not loving the answer, asking Claude the same thing, getting a different answer, then asking Gemini, and having NO SYSTEM to remember which one was actually better. Wasted hours re-testing the same questions because I had no memory of what worked last time. This tiny tracker changed everything. Now I just check the sheet before I even ask—saves me from the "which AI should I use?" paralysis. Anybody have thoughts on this? I really hope this helps save someone the headache! 🙏 Happy to chat more if you need a walkthrough. Thanks!
Hey everyone—not sure if it's just me, but I've been hitting a wall with forgetting which AI prompts actually worked when I come back to a project weeks later. (I'm guessing I'm not the only one?)
After a lot of tinkering, I finally landed on a simple process that solves it. The best part? It's costing me less than $10/m. Here's the simple fix I'm using: 1. First, you create a simple voice memo on your phone right after you get a good AI result (literally just say: "For [project name], this prompt worked: [prompt]. Why it worked: [reason].") 2. Then, once a week, use Otter.ai (free tier) to transcribe all your voice memos into text. 3. Finally, paste the transcriptions into a Google Doc organized by project, so you can search it later when you need that same approach. It took me a while to figure this out, so I hope this saves some of you the headache. The problem I kept hitting: I'd get amazing AI results, then weeks later I'd completely forget what prompt I used or why it worked. Started from scratch every time, wasting hours re-testing things I'd already figured out. This tiny voice-memo system is helping me actually remember what works without adding extra screen time to my workflow. Let me know if any of that is unclear. Happy to help! 🙏
0 likes • Jan 24
@Carsten Schulz Yep! Otter.ai does it automatically. You can even do it directly in ChatGPT voice mode now—just have a conversation, then ask it to "summarize what I just said about [project name] and give me the key prompts." The voice memo → transcription route just felt cleaner for me because I don't have to remember to ask AI to summarize. I just dump my thoughts and batch-process them weekly. Have you found a workflow that works better for you?
1 like • Jan 24
@Douglas Curtis Glad it helped! The voice memo part was the game-changer for me—way less friction than trying to type notes after every AI session. What are you using AI for most right now?
Avoid sycophancy
I asked an AI to create an image of how I treat it and I added one condition: Avoid sycophancy. Don’t try to make me happy. I want the truth. What came back stopped me cold. Because the image wasn’t about how I treat AI at all. It was me. Overloaded. Surrounded by unfinished ideas that are actually good. Constantly pushing for one more fix, one more improvement, one more iteration. Never quite letting anything feel “done.” And that’s when it hit me: I don’t treat tools this way., I treat myself this way. That relentless internal pressure? That constant optimization loop? That refusal to pause because I can see what’s possible? That’s EXACTLY me. Not self-hatred. Not failure. Just high standards with no recovery cycle. It’s kind of wild (and a little uncomfortable) realizing that the same mindset that drives growth can also quietly drain you if you never step back and acknowledge progress. Sharing this because I can’t be the only one who lives here. If this resonates, you’re not broken — you’re just pushing a powerful system without enough rest. And sometimes, the mirror comes from places you don’t expect.
Avoid sycophancy
1 like • Jan 22
@Nicholas Vidal The "high standards with no recovery cycle" line hit hard. I do the same thing—constantly see what could be better, never pause to acknowledge what's already working. The optimization loop becomes the identity. The uncomfortable part is realizing that perfectionism isn't about the work. It's about avoiding the discomfort of calling something "done" when you know it could be 2% better. What made you finally ask AI for the truth instead of validation?
Hi everyone, I know I'm not the only one who's been banging my head against the wall trying to fix losing track of which AI model gave me the best answers and ending up re-asking the same questions across ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini.
After a lot of trial and error, I think I've finally found a simple fix. I wanted to share it in case it's helpful for anyone else (it should cost less than $10/m): Here's the simple guide: 1. First, create a simple Google Sheet with columns: "Question I Asked," "GPT Answer," "Claude Answer," "Which Won," "Date." 2. Next, whenever you get conflicting answers from different AIs, paste both responses and mark which one was more accurate or useful. 3. Finally, after 2 weeks, you'll see patterns—like "Claude is better for writing," "GPT is better for code," "Gemini is better for research." The problem I kept hitting: asking the same question to 3 different AIs, getting 3 different answers, and having no system to remember which one was actually right. Wasted hours re-testing the same things. This tiny tracker is helping me stop guessing and start knowing which AI to trust for what. I really hope this helps save someone the headache! 🙏 Happy to chat more if you need a walkthrough.
Introduction
Hey everyone — I’m Michael. I’m an entrepreneur and I’m learning AI to build smarter systems and save time across my projects. I’ve used ChatGPT a bit already, but I’m still early in the journey and want to level up fast. The main thing I want AI to help me with is content workflows + automation (turning ideas into posts consistently without burning out). I joined because I want practical, repeatable results and to learn from people actually doing it. Fun fact: I’m big on simple living and nature resets — it keeps me grounded while I build. Glad to be here.
1 like • Jan 21
@Michael Lohse Welcome 🌟🌟🌟
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Rehan Pathan
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82points to level up
@rehan-pathan-1082
I will do it at any cost!!!!

Active 20h ago
Joined Jan 1, 2026
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