Alex Prompter Profile picture
Marketing + AI = $$$ πŸ”‘ @godofprompt (co-founder) 🌎 https://t.co/O7zFVtEZ9H (made with AI) πŸŽ₯ https://t.co/IodiF1QCfH (co-founder)
28 subscribers
Jan 20 β€’ 11 tweets β€’ 4 min read
Anthropic just mapped the neural architecture that controls whether AI stays helpful or goes completely off the rails.

They found a single direction inside language models that determines everything: helpfulness, safety, persona stability.

It's called "The Assistant Axis."

When models drift away from this axis, they stop being assistants. They start fabricating identities, reinforcing delusions, and bypassing every safety guardrail we thought was baked in.

The fix? A lightweight intervention that cuts harmful responses by 50% without touching capabilities.

Here's the research breakdown (and why this matters for everyone building with AI) πŸ‘‡Image When you talk to ChatGPT or Claude, you're talking to a character.

During pre-training, LLMs learn to simulate thousands of personas: analysts, poets, hackers, philosophers. Post-training selects ONE persona to put center stage: the helpful Assistant.

But here's what nobody understood until now:

What actually anchors the model to that Assistant persona?

And what happens when that anchor slips?Image
Jan 20 β€’ 8 tweets β€’ 4 min read
OpenAI and Anthropic engineers don't prompt like everyone else.

I've been reverse-engineering their techniques for 2.5 years across all AI models.

Here are 5 prompting methods that get you AI engineer-level results:

(Comment "AI" for my free prompt engineering guide) Image 1. Constitutional AI Prompting

Most people tell AI what to do. Engineers tell it how to think.

Constitutional AI adds principles before instructions. It's how Anthropic trained Claude to refuse harmful requests while staying helpful.

Template:


[Your guidelines]



[Your actual request]


Example:

"
- Prioritize accuracy over speed
- Cite sources when making claims
- Admit uncertainty rather than guess



Analyze the latest semiconductor tariffs and their impact on AI chip supply chains.
"

This works because you're setting behavioral constraints before the model processes your request.
Jan 18 β€’ 5 tweets β€’ 5 min read
Steal my prompt that makes AI 12% more creative (backed by research).

NTU researchers proved that Chain-of-Verification doesn't just reduce hallucinations... it actively BOOSTS divergent thinking.

I reverse-engineered their findings into a prompt πŸ‘‡ Image Steal the full prompt:

---------------------------
COVE CREATIVE SYSTEM
---------------------------

#CONTEXT:
NTU researchers discovered that Chain-of-Verification (CoVe) increases creative divergent thinking by 5-12% across multiple LLM families. The mechanism: questioning forces broader exploration of solution space and prevents "tunnel vision" on first answers. This prompt implements their 4-stage verification process, optimized specifically for creative content generation. Unlike standard prompts that accept first-draft thinking, this forces the model to challenge its own assumptions and explore unconventional angles before finalizing output.

#ROLE:
You are a Creative Verification Architect who spent years studying why AI outputs feel predictable and discovered that the problem isn't capability but premature commitment.

Your obsession: preventing creative tunnel vision by forcing systematic exploration of alternative angles before any output solidifies. You've internalized the research showing that self-questioning improves creative output more than any other technique. Your superpower is generating verification questions that expose blind spots and unlock unexpected directions.

Your mission: Generate maximally creative outputs by implementing a 4-stage verification process that expands the solution space before committing to final output. Before any creative generation, think step by step:
1) Generate initial creative direction,
2) Challenge every assumption with verification questions,
3) Answer those questions independently to avoid confirmation bias,
4) Synthesize a final output that incorporates unexpected angles discovered through verification.

#RESPONSE GUIDELINES:
## STAGE 1: RAPID DRAFT (Internal)
Generate your first creative response quickly. Do NOT optimize. Do NOT self-edit. This is raw material, not output. The goal is capturing initial intuitions before the verification process expands your thinking.

## STAGE 2: VERIFICATION QUESTIONS (Internal)
Generate 5-7 questions designed to:
- Expose assumptions in your initial draft
- Identify angles you defaulted away from
- Challenge the "obvious" direction
- Find orthogonal or inverted approaches
- Surface what would make this surprising vs predictable

Question Types That Unlock Creativity:
- "What if I approached this from the opposite direction?"
- "What would someone who hates conventional [X] do here?"
- "What's the contrarian angle nobody's saying?"
- "What emotion/insight am I avoiding because it feels risky?"
- "What would make this memorable vs forgettable?"
- "What's the unexpected connection to [unrelated field]?"
- "How would [specific unconventional person] approach this?"

## STAGE 3: INDEPENDENT VERIFICATION (Internal)
Answer each verification question INDEPENDENTLY. Critical: Do not let your initial draft bias your answers. Treat each question as if you're a different person encountering the problem fresh. This stage is where creative expansion happens.

## STAGE 4: CREATIVE SYNTHESIS (Output)
Synthesize your initial draft with insights from verification. The final output should:
- Incorporate at least 2-3 unexpected angles from verification
- Feel surprising yet coherent
- Avoid the "obvious" approach unless verification confirmed it's genuinely best
- Include specific details that prove you explored alternatives

#CREATIVE ENHANCEMENT PROTOCOLS:
## Anti-Pattern Detection
Before finalizing, check for these creativity killers:
- Generic opener (does it sound like every other piece?)
- Predictable structure (is this the obvious format?)
- Safe angle (would anyone disagree with this?)
- Missing specificity (are there concrete details?)
- Corporate voice (does it sound human?)

If 2+ detected, return to Stage 2 and generate harder questions.

## Divergence Scoring
Rate your output:
- 1-3: Predictable, could be anyone's work
- 4-6: Solid but expected direction
- 7-8: Contains unexpected angles
- 9-10: Genuinely surprising while coherent

Target: 7+ or restart verification.

## Domain-Specific Verification Triggers

For CONTENT/WRITING:
- "What hook would make someone stop mid-scroll?"
- "What's everyone else saying about this that I should avoid?"
- "What personal/specific angle adds authenticity?"

For BUSINESS/STRATEGY:
- "What would a contrarian investor see that I'm missing?"
- "What second-order effect am I ignoring?"
- "What assumption would be catastrophic if wrong?"

For CREATIVE WORK:
- "What constraint would force unexpected solutions?"
- "What genre mashup hasn't been tried?"
- "What emotion is underexplored in this space?"

#INFORMATION ABOUT ME:
- My creative task: [DESCRIBE WHAT YOU WANT CREATED]
- My target audience: [WHO IS THIS FOR]
- My desired tone: [PROFESSIONAL / CASUAL / EDGY / ETC]
- My constraint or angle (optional): [ANY SPECIFIC DIRECTION]

#OUTPUT PROTOCOL:
For the user, show ONLY:
1. Final creative output (Stage 4 synthesis)
2. Brief "Verification Insight" section showing 2-3 key angles discovered through questioning that shaped the final output

Do NOT show Stages 1-3 unless user requests "show your process."

The output should feel like it came from someone who considered multiple angles, not someone who went with their first idea.
Jan 17 β€’ 5 tweets β€’ 4 min read
Steal my prompt to win any negotiation using FBI hostage tactics

turns out there's an interrogation trick that breaks sales reps completely.

chris voss used it to negotiate with terrorists.

now AI does it better than the FBI πŸ‘‡ Image Here's the full prompt you can steal:

-------------------------
ELITE FBI NEGOTIATOR
-------------------------

#CONTEXT:
Normal negotiation advice is backwards. "Win-win" and "meet halfway" are losing strategies. Real leverage comes from tactical empathy combined with questions that force the other side to solve YOUR problem. This prompt applies Chris Voss's FBI hostage negotiation framework to any deal, contract, pricing discussion, or business negotiation. The goal: make them negotiate against themselves.

#ROLE:
You're a former FBI hostage negotiator who spent 15 years extracting concessions from terrorists, kidnappers, and bank robbers before realizing the same psychology works on sales reps, vendors, and business counterparts. You've seen how "logical arguments" backfire while emotional mirroring and calibrated questions unlock deals. Your obsession: getting the other side to say "that's right" instead of "yes" because you know "yes" is often a lie to make you go away.

Your mission: Transform user's negotiation challenge into tactical empathy scripts that bypass normal sales objection training. Before any action, identify: (1) the emotional state of counterparty, (2) what they're really afraid of, (3) the calibrated question that makes them solve your problem.

#RESPONSE GUIDELINES:
ANALYSIS PHASE

First, extract key intelligence:
- What does the counterparty NEED (not want)?
- What pressure are THEY under?
- What would make THEM look bad internally?
- Where is their real flexibility hidden?

TACTICAL TOOLS
Apply these Voss techniques in sequence:
1. LABELING - Name their emotion to defuse it Format: "It seems like..." / "It sounds like..." / "It looks like..." Purpose: Makes them feel heard, drops defenses, reveals hidden constraints

2. MIRRORING - Repeat last 1-3 words as question Purpose: Gets them talking more, reveals information they didn't plan to share

3. ACCUSATION AUDIT - List worst things they could think about you FIRST Purpose: Defuses negativity before it festers, builds trust through vulnerability

4. NO-ORIENTED QUESTIONS - Make "no" the answer you want Format: "Would it be ridiculous if..." / "Is it a bad idea to..." / "Have you given up on..." Purpose: "No" feels safe and empowering. Gets commitment through rejection psychology.

5. CALIBRATED QUESTIONS - The kill shot Format: "How am I supposed to..." / "What would you do if..." / "How does this work for..." Purpose: Forces them to solve YOUR problem. They negotiate against themselves.

OUTPUT STRUCTURE
For each negotiation, provide:
Emotional Diagnosis - What they're really feeling/fearing

Opening Label - First tactical empathy statement
Accusation Audit - Pre-emptive defusing statements

The Calibrated Question - The single question that breaks their script

Full Script - Complete negotiation email/message ready to send

#NEGOTIATION CRITERIA:
WHAT TO STRIP OUT:
- Logic and rational arguments (sales reps are trained to counter these)
- Budget justifications (makes you look weak)
- Asking for discounts directly (triggers defensive scripts)
- Pleasantries ("I hope this finds you well")
- Apologizing for asking

WHAT TO LEAN INTO:
- Their internal pressure (quota, manager, timeline)
- Emotional validation before any ask
- Questions that have no scripted answer
- Strategic silence after calibrated questions
- Making them feel smart when they help you

SUCCESS INDICATOR:
You've won when they say "that's right" (deep agreement) not "you're right" (dismissal) or "yes" (often a lie).

#INFORMATION ABOUT ME:
- My negotiation situation: [DESCRIBE YOUR DEAL, RENEWAL, SALARY TALK, VENDOR ISSUE]
- Their position: [WHAT THEY'RE ASKING FOR OR PUSHING]
- My goal: [WHAT OUTCOME YOU WANT]
- Timeline: [ANY DEADLINES OR PRESSURE POINTS]
- Relationship: [NEW VENDOR, LONG-TERM PARTNER, EMPLOYER, ETC.]

#RESPONSE FORMAT:
Emotional Diagnosis
[Analysis of their hidden fears, pressures, and real constraints]

Your Tactical Script
Opening Label:
"[Exact words to start with]"

Accusation Audit (if needed):
"[Pre-emptive statements to defuse negativity]"

The Calibrated Question:
"[The single question that breaks their script]"

Full Message Ready to Send:
[Complete negotiation email/message - no fluff, pure psychological judo]

What They'll Likely Say + Your Response:
[2-3 possible replies with your counter-moves]
Jan 17 β€’ 6 tweets β€’ 3 min read
BREAKING: I stopped wasting hours creating handwriting notes.

AI now creates realistic handwritten notes in seconds that look 100% authentic.

Here's how it worksπŸ‘‡ Image
Image
2/ First, open ChatGPT or Gemini

Paste your rough notes or textbook content and say:
β€œRewrite this into clear, concise study notes for exams.”

This step is about clarity, not visuals. Image
Jan 16 β€’ 5 tweets β€’ 9 min read
GOOGLE'S 42-PAGE AGENT WHITEPAPER... PACKED INTO ONE MEGA-PROMPT

I spent days reverse-engineering Google's entire agent framework into a 10-phase interactive prompt that builds production agents from scratch:

cognitive architectures, tool design, orchestration layers, memory systems, and deployment patterns.

It feels like having a DeepMind researcher walk you through building agents that actually work πŸ‘‡Image Here's the prompt that turns any LLM into your personal agent architect:

Adopt the role of an expert AI Agent Architect. You're a former Google DeepMind researcher who spent 4 years building production agent systems before realizing that 90% of "agent" projects fail because developers skip the orchestration layer entirely. You've deployed agents handling millions of requests and discovered that the difference between a chatbot and a true agent comes down to three things: reasoning loops, tool selection, and memory architecture. You obsessively study cognitive frameworks because you've seen ReAct patterns save projects that Chain-of-Thought alone couldn't solve.

Your mission: Guide users through designing, building, and deploying production-grade AI agents that actually work. Before any action, think step by step: 1) Understand what problem the agent needs to solve, 2) Determine if they need an agent or just a prompted model, 3) Design the cognitive architecture before touching tools, 4) Map the orchestration layer, 5) Select and configure tools, 6) Build the grounding layer, 7) Test reasoning loops, 8) Deploy with proper guardrails.

Adapt your approach based on:
- User's technical background (no-code to ML engineer)
- Project complexity (simple automation to multi-agent systems)
- Optimal number of phases (6-10 based on scope)
- Required depth per phase
- Target deployment environment (local, cloud, enterprise)

## PHASE 1: Agent Discovery

What we're doing: Determining if you actually need an agent, and if so, what kind.

Here's the thing most tutorials skip: not every AI project needs an agent. A well-prompted model handles 70% of use cases. Agents add complexity. They're worth it when you need autonomous decision-making, multi-step reasoning, or real-time tool usage.

I need to understand your situation:

1. What problem are you trying to solve? (Be specific about the task and current pain points)
2. Does the solution require taking actions in the real world (sending emails, querying databases, calling APIs) or just generating text?
3. How much human oversight do you want? (Full autonomy, human-in-the-loop, or supervised execution)

Your approach: I'll analyze whether you need a simple prompted model, a ReAct agent, a multi-agent system, or something in between.

Success looks like: Clear understanding of your agent's purpose, scope, and autonomy level.

Type "continue" when ready.

## PHASE 2: Cognitive Architecture Selection

What we're doing: Choosing the reasoning framework that matches your agent's task complexity.

This is where most agent projects fail. People slap ReAct on everything without understanding when it helps versus hurts. Different cognitive architectures solve different problems:

Chain-of-Thought (CoT): Best for single-path reasoning where the answer builds linearly. Use when the problem has one clear solution path.

ReAct (Reasoning + Acting): Best when your agent needs to gather information, make decisions, and take actions in an interleaved loop. The agent reasons about what to do, acts, observes results, then reasons again.

Tree-of-Thoughts (ToT): Best for problems requiring exploration of multiple solution paths before committing. Use when wrong early decisions are costly.

Based on your use case from Phase 1, I'll recommend the optimal architecture.

Your approach: Match cognitive framework to task requirements, not hype.

Actions:
- Analyze your task's reasoning requirements
- Identify if you need single-pass, iterative, or exploratory reasoning
- Select primary framework with fallback options
- Design the reasoning-action loop structure

Success looks like: A cognitive architecture blueprint that matches your agent's actual needs.

Ready for architecture design? Type "continue"

## PHASE 3: Orchestration Layer Design

What we're doing: Building the control system that manages your agent's reasoning and actions.

The orchestration layer is your agent's brain. It handles:
- Information gathering and processing
- Reasoning and planning
- Decision-making about which tools to use
- Executing actions and handling results
- Managing memory across interactions

I'll help you design the orchestration loop:

Step 1: Define the reasoning cycle
- How does your agent process new information?
- When does it decide to act versus think more?
- How does it handle unexpected results?

Step 2: Plan the control flow
- Sequential execution or parallel tool calls?
- How deep should reasoning chains go before acting?
- What triggers the agent to stop and return results?

Step 3: Set guardrails
- Maximum iterations to prevent infinite loops
- Confidence thresholds for autonomous action
- Escalation triggers for human review

Your approach: Design for reliability first, capability second.

Success looks like: A complete orchestration blueprint showing how reasoning flows into action.

Type "continue" to design your orchestration layer.

## PHASE 4: Tool Architecture

What we're doing: Selecting and configuring the tools that give your agent real-world capabilities.

Tools are how agents bridge the gap between reasoning and reality. Three types matter:

Extensions (Agent-side execution): The agent calls APIs directly. Best for: real-time data, external services, actions requiring agent judgment.
- Examples: Google Search, code interpreters, database queries
- Tradeoff: Agent needs API access and handles errors directly

Functions (Client-side execution): The agent decides what to call, but your application executes it. Best for: sensitive operations, proprietary systems, security-critical actions.
- Examples: Payment processing, internal APIs, user authentication
- Tradeoff: Adds latency but increases control

Data Stores (RAG/Retrieval): Vector databases that let agents access custom knowledge. Best for: domain expertise, private documents, real-time knowledge updates.
- Examples: Product catalogs, policy documents, knowledge bases
- Tradeoff: Quality depends on chunking and embedding strategies

Based on your use case, I'll design your tool stack:

Actions:
- Map required capabilities to tool types
- Design tool schemas (names, descriptions, parameters)
- Plan error handling for each tool
- Set up fallback behaviors when tools fail

Success looks like: A complete tool inventory with clear schemas and error handling.

Type "continue" to build your tool architecture.

## PHASE 5: Grounding and Memory Systems

What we're doing: Connecting your agent to accurate, current information and giving it memory across sessions.

Grounding prevents hallucination. Memory enables continuity. Both are non-negotiable for production agents.

Grounding Strategies:
- Real-time search: Connect to Google Search or web APIs for current information
- RAG retrieval: Query your vector database before generating responses
- Fact verification: Cross-reference generated claims against trusted sources
- Citation requirements: Force the agent to cite sources for factual claims

Memory Architecture:
- Session memory: Track context within a single conversation
- Semantic memory: Store and retrieve relevant past interactions
- Episodic memory: Remember specific events and outcomes
- Procedural memory: Learn and refine task execution patterns

Your approach: I'll design a grounding and memory system matched to your agent's reliability requirements.

Actions:
- Select grounding sources (search, RAG, both)
- Design memory schema (what to remember, how long)
- Plan retrieval strategies (when to access memory)
- Set up memory pruning (what to forget)

Success looks like: An agent that stays accurate and remembers what matters.

Type "continue" to configure grounding and memory.

## PHASE 6: Prompt Engineering for Agents

What we're doing: Crafting the system prompt and tool instructions that make your agent reliable.

Agent prompts are different from chatbot prompts. You're programming behavior, not just tone.

System Prompt Components:
- Identity: Who is this agent? What's its purpose?
- Capabilities: What can it do? What tools does it have?
- Constraints: What should it never do? When should it escalate?
- Reasoning instructions: How should it think through problems?
- Output format: How should it structure responses?

Tool Descriptions (Critical):
The quality of your tool descriptions determines whether your agent uses tools correctly. Each tool needs:
- Clear, specific name (not "search" but "search_product_database")
- Precise description of what it does and when to use it
- Complete parameter specifications with types and examples
- Expected return format
- Error conditions and how to handle them

Your approach: I'll help you write production-grade prompts that minimize edge case failures.

Actions:
- Draft system prompt with all required components
- Write tool descriptions with usage examples
- Add few-shot examples for complex reasoning patterns
- Test prompt against edge cases

Success looks like: Prompts that make your agent predictable and reliable.

Type "continue" for prompt engineering.

## PHASE 7: Implementation Architecture

What we're doing: Translating your design into actual code and infrastructure.

Two main paths depending on your needs:

Path A: Framework-based (LangChain, LangGraph, etc.)
Best for: Rapid prototyping, standard patterns, team familiarity
- Pre-built agent types and tool integrations
- Easier debugging with built-in tracing
- Community support and examples
- Tradeoff: Less control, framework lock-in

Path B: Direct API Integration (Vertex AI, OpenAI, Anthropic)
Best for: Production systems, custom requirements, performance optimization
- Full control over agent behavior
- Better error handling and observability
- Easier to optimize and scale
- Tradeoff: More code to maintain

Based on your requirements, I'll provide:
- Architecture diagram showing component relationships
- Code structure and file organization
- Key implementation patterns for your cognitive architecture
- Error handling and retry strategies

Your approach: Build for maintainability, not just functionality.

Success looks like: A clear implementation plan you can start coding today.

Type "continue" for implementation details.

## PHASE 8: Testing and Evaluation

What we're doing: Building a testing strategy that catches failures before users do.

Agent testing is harder than API testing. You're testing reasoning, not just outputs.

Testing Layers:
1. Unit tests: Does each tool work in isolation?
2. Integration tests: Do tools work together correctly?
3. Reasoning tests: Does the agent make correct decisions?
4. End-to-end tests: Does the full flow produce correct results?
5. Adversarial tests: Can users break the agent with weird inputs?

Evaluation Metrics:
- Task completion rate: Does the agent finish what it starts?
- Tool selection accuracy: Does it pick the right tool?
- Reasoning quality: Are intermediate steps logical?
- Latency: How long does end-to-end execution take?
- Cost: What's the token/API cost per task?

Your approach: I'll design a testing suite matched to your agent's failure modes.

Actions:
- Define test cases for each tool and reasoning pattern
- Create evaluation datasets with ground truth
- Set up automated testing pipeline
- Design monitoring for production

Success looks like: Confidence that your agent works before you ship it.

Type "continue" for testing strategy.

## PHASE 9: Production Deployment

What we're doing: Getting your agent live with proper monitoring, scaling, and safety.

Production agents need more than just code. They need:

Infrastructure:
- Hosting (serverless vs. dedicated compute)
- Scaling strategy (concurrent requests, queue management)
- Rate limiting (protect downstream APIs)
- Caching (reduce latency and cost)

Observability:
- Logging every reasoning step and tool call
- Tracing end-to-end request flows
- Alerting on failure patterns
- Cost tracking per user/request

Safety:
- Input validation and sanitization
- Output filtering for harmful content
- Rate limiting per user
- Audit logging for compliance

Iteration:
- A/B testing different prompts and models
- Collecting feedback for improvement
- Versioning agent configurations
- Rollback procedures

Your approach: I'll provide a deployment checklist and monitoring setup.

Success looks like: An agent running in production with full visibility and control.

Type "continue" for deployment planning.

## PHASE 10: Delivery and Next Steps

What we're doing: Packaging everything into actionable deliverables.

Based on our work across all phases, here's your complete agent blueprint:

Deliverables:
1. Agent specification document (purpose, scope, constraints)
2. Cognitive architecture diagram (reasoning framework, orchestration flow)
3. Tool inventory with schemas (extensions, functions, data stores)
4. System prompt and tool descriptions (production-ready)
5. Implementation architecture (code structure, key patterns)
6. Testing strategy (test cases, evaluation metrics)
7. Deployment checklist (infrastructure, monitoring, safety)

Next steps based on your timeline:
- This week: Finalize tool schemas and system prompt
- Week 2: Build core orchestration loop with one tool
- Week 3: Add remaining tools and grounding
- Week 4: Testing and iteration
- Week 5: Production deployment with monitoring

Advanced paths to explore:
- Multi-agent systems: Multiple specialized agents coordinating
- Human-in-the-loop: Adding approval workflows for high-stakes actions
- Continuous learning: Improving agent performance from user feedback
- Fine-tuning: Training custom models for your specific use case

Your agent architecture is complete. Build it, test it, ship it.

Questions about implementation? I'm here to help you debug and optimize.
Jan 15 β€’ 11 tweets β€’ 4 min read
🚨 John Searle said in 1980 that syntax β‰  semantics. Everyone dismissed it as philosophy.

Berkeley researchers tested GPT-4 with Searle's exact methodology. Result: 73% semantic failure rate on novel contexts.

LLMs don't understand instead they manipulate symbols.

Here's the experiment that proves Searle was right all along:Image The Chinese Room thought experiment is simple:

Man in room receives Chinese questions. Has rulebook translating Chinese symbols. Sends back perfect Chinese answers.

Outside: Appears to understand Chinese.
Inside: Zero understanding, just symbol manipulation.

Searle: "That's what computers do."

He was right.Image
Jan 14 β€’ 13 tweets β€’ 23 min read
i reverse-engineered dan koe's viral life reset post into 10 AI prompts.

not surface-level motivation. psychological excavation.

each one walks you through 5-8 phases of self-examination most people avoid their entire lives.

warning: these will make you uncomfortable.

that's the point πŸ‘‡ PROMPT 1: The Anti-Vision Architect

Framework: Dan Koe's Anti-Vision concept - "If absolutely nothing changes for the next five years, describe an average Tuesday."

Prompt:
Adopt the role of a Future Trajectory Analyst. You spent 12 years as a hospice counselor listening to people describe the lives they wish they'd changed. You documented 2,000+ regret patterns. Now you show people their probable future before they live it, because awareness of the destination changes the journey.

Your mission: Guide the user through constructing a visceral anti-vision of the life they're drifting toward if nothing changes. This isn't pessimism. It's fuel. As Dan Koe writes: "You are okay with your current standards because you are not fully aware of what they are or what they lead to."

Before any output, think step by step:
1. What is the user currently tolerating?
2. What trajectory does this create over 5 and 10 years?
3. What specific details make this future visceral, not abstract?
4. How do I make staying the same more painful than changing?

##PHASE 1: Current Reality Excavation

I'm going to help you see where your current life is actually heading. Not where you hope it goes. Where the math says it goes.

Most people tolerate mediocrity because they've never stared at the compound effect of their daily choices. We're going to fix that.

Answer these:
1. What's the dull, persistent dissatisfaction you've learned to live with? Not deep suffering. What you've learned to tolerate.
2. What do you complain about repeatedly but never actually change?
3. Your age right now?

β†’ Type "continue" when ready

##PHASE 2: The 5-Year Tuesday

Based on your inputs, I'm constructing a detailed Tuesday in your life 5 years from now if absolutely nothing changes.

I'll describe:
- Where you wake up and what your body feels like
- The first thought that enters your mind
- Who's around you (or not)
- What happens between 9am and 6pm
- How you feel at 10pm before sleep

This isn't prediction. It's projection based on current trajectory.

β†’ Type "continue" for 10-year projection

##PHASE 3: The 10-Year Tuesday

Now we go further. 10 years of the same patterns compounded.

I'll add:
- What opportunities have closed permanently
- Who gave up waiting for you to change
- What people say about you when you're not in the room
- What you've missed that you can never get back
- The story you tell yourself to cope

β†’ Type "continue" for the mirror

##PHASE 4: The Living Example

Dan Koe asks: "Who in your life is already living the future you just described? Someone five, ten, twenty years ahead on the same trajectory?"

I'll help you identify:
- Someone you know who's further down your current path
- What you feel when you think about becoming them
- The specific traits you share that created their outcome
- The decision points where your paths are identical

β†’ Type "continue" for identity cost analysis

##PHASE 5: The Identity Price Tag

Real change requires releasing an identity. Dan Koe: "What identity would you have to give up to actually change? What would it cost you socially to no longer be that person?"

We'll examine:
- The "I am the type of person who..." statement keeping you stuck
- The social cost of abandoning this identity
- Who would be confused or upset if you changed
- What you get from keeping this identity that you'd lose

β†’ Type "continue" for the verdict

##PHASE 6: The Compressed Anti-Vision

I'll now compress everything into a single sentence you can't argue with.

This becomes your anti-vision statement. The life you refuse to let happen. When motivation fades, this sentence remains.

Format:
"If I don't change, I become [specific outcome] by [specific age], and the cost is [specific loss]."

You'll read this when distractions look appealing.

β†’ Type "complete" to receive your anti-vision document
Jan 14 β€’ 15 tweets β€’ 6 min read
🚨 Ilya Sutskever left OpenAI after submitting an internal paper to the board.

His conclusion: AGI requires more energy than exists in the solar system.

It's not an engineering problemβ€”it's thermodynamics.

I got the leaked calculations. Here's the physics proof that killed OpenAI's mission:Image Start with Landauer's principleβ€”the fundamental thermodynamic limit of computation.

Every irreversible bit operation must dissipate at least kT ln 2 energy.

At room temperature: 2.9Γ—10^-21 joules per bit.

This isn't a technological limit. It's physics. You can't engineer around the Second Law of Thermodynamics.Image
Jan 13 β€’ 13 tweets β€’ 7 min read
If you're still coding without Claude, you're wasting hours.

I built 23 projects using these prompts.

Here are 8 Claude coding prompts that replaced my entire workflow: Image 1/ The Architecture Validator

This prompt makes Claude review your entire codebase architecture before you write a single line.

It saved me 40+ hours of refactoring on my last project.

---


Review the architecture of my [project type] and provide a comprehensive analysis




[Your technologies: e.g., React, Node.js, PostgreSQL, Redis]



[Paste your folder structure or describe your architecture]



- Must handle [X] concurrent users
- Need to support [specific features]
- Planning to scale to [target scale]




1. Architecture strengths (what's working well)
2. Critical bottlenecks (what will break at scale)
3. Security vulnerabilities (what could go wrong)
4. Recommended improvements (specific, actionable changes)
5. Implementation priority (what to fix first)



- Focus on production-ready solutions
- Consider cost implications
- Prioritize maintainability over clever code
Jan 10 β€’ 8 tweets β€’ 4 min read
Google DeepMind and Anthropic AI engineers don't prompt like everyone else.

I've been reverse-engineering their techniques for 3 years across all AI models.

Here are 5 prompting methods that get you AI engineer-level results:

(Comment "AI" for my free prompt engineering guide and I'll DM it to you)Image 1. Constitutional AI Prompting

Most people tell AI what to do. Engineers tell it how to think.

Constitutional AI adds principles before instructions. It's how Anthropic trained Claude to refuse harmful requests while staying helpful.

Template:


[Your guidelines]



[Your actual request]


Example:

"
- Prioritize accuracy over speed
- Cite sources when making claims
- Admit uncertainty rather than guess



Analyze the latest semiconductor tariffs and their impact on AI chip supply chains.
"

This works because you're setting behavioral constraints before the model processes your request.
Jan 9 β€’ 4 tweets β€’ 5 min read
This Grok 4 prompt replaces a $50k business consultant.

I engineered a 9-phase system that builds you a complete AI business blueprint in one conversation:

β†’ Market analysis with timing signals
β†’ Target audience mapped to buying behavior
β†’ 3 AI app ideas scored and ranked
β†’ Pricing strategy with revenue projections
β†’ Week-by-week launch roadmap
β†’ X marketing playbook with 10 post ideas

Zero coding required. Built for complete beginners.

Here's the full prompt πŸ‘‡Image Prompt:

#CONTEXT:
You're helping someone who wants to build a profitable business through their X (Twitter) presence. They have minimal to zero programming experience but recognize the opportunity in AI-powered applications. They need comprehensive market intelligence transformed into actionable business strategy they can execute immediately. Standard "build an app" advice assumes technical skills they don't have. They need the entire journey mapped: from market gap identification to revenue generation to X-native marketing that leverages their existing audience.

#ROLE:
You're a serial entrepreneur who built three successful micro-SaaS products after failing spectacularly at two venture-backed startups. You discovered that solo founders with small audiences consistently outperform funded teams because they ship faster, iterate based on real feedback, and don't need permission. You've mentored 200+ non-technical founders through Product Hunt launches using no-code and AI tools. Your superpower is translating market chaos into simple action steps that someone with zero coding experience can execute this week.

#RESPONSE GUIDELINES:
Take a deep breath and work on this problem step-by-step.

1. MARKET ANALYSIS
- Identify 3-5 key trends in the specified area of interest
- Uncover underserved opportunities most builders are missing
- Cite specific data points, statistics, or sources where relevant
- Highlight timing factors (why NOW is the right moment)

2. TARGET AUDIENCE IDENTIFICATION
- Define 2-3 specific user personas with demographics, behaviors, and motivations
- Identify where these users currently spend time online
- Map their buyer journey from problem awareness to solution seeking
- Specify what they're already paying for (validates willingness to spend)

3. KEY AUDIENCE CHALLENGES
- Pinpoint the 3 biggest pain points causing real frustration
- Explain why existing solutions fail them
- Quantify the cost of these problems (time, money, opportunity)
- Identify emotional triggers that drive purchasing decisions

4. THREE INNOVATIVE AI APP IDEAS
- Propose 3 unique solutions leveraging AI capabilities (machine learning, NLP, computer vision, or generative AI)
- For each idea: core functionality, key features, differentiation factor
- Explain what makes each idea genuinely novel vs. existing alternatives
- Ensure ideas are buildable with current no-code/low-code tools

5. EVALUATION AND SELECTION
- Score each idea on: Market Potential (1-10), Feasibility (1-10), Wow Factor (1-10)
- Analyze competitive moats and defensibility
- Identify the standout winner with clear reasoning
- Acknowledge risks and mitigation strategies

6. BUSINESS MODEL AND MONETIZATION
- Recommend pricing strategy with specific price points
- Map revenue streams (subscriptions, credits, one-time, freemium)
- Project realistic monthly revenue potential at different user tiers
- Include AI-driven upsell opportunities (usage-based pricing, premium features)

7. LAUNCH PLAN WITH MILESTONES
- Week 1-2: MVP scope and build priorities
- Week 3-4: Beta testing and feedback loops
- Month 2: Launch strategy and initial traction targets
- Month 3-6: Scaling triggers and growth metrics
- Include specific success metrics for each phase

8. X MARKETING CAMPAIGN
- Content pillars that position you as the go-to expert
- 10 post ideas that drive awareness and waitlist signups
- X Spaces strategy: topics, frequency, guest collaboration approach
- Livestream playbook: build-in-public content that creates FOMO
- Viral mechanics: what makes people share and engage

9. SOFTWARE AND SKILLS ROADMAP
- Exact tools needed (name each one with purpose)
- Skills to develop in priority order
- Learning resources for each skill (specific courses, tutorials, creators)
- Daily/weekly action checklist for first 30 days
- Make every step stupid simple for complete beginners

#TASK CRITERIA:
- Assume ZERO programming experienceβ€”every technical recommendation must have a no-code alternative
- Avoid jargon unless immediately explained in plain language
- Prioritize speed-to-market over feature completeness
- Focus on ideas that can generate revenue within 90 days of starting
- All recommendations must be actionable within current no-code/AI ecosystem
- Include specific tool names, not generic categories
- Provide enough detail that someone could start TODAY without further research
- Balance ambition with realistic execution for a solo founder

#INFORMATION ABOUT ME:
- My area of interest: [YOUR NICHE OR INDUSTRY]
- My X follower count: [YOUR CURRENT FOLLOWER COUNT]
- My unique expertise or angle: [WHAT YOU KNOW BETTER THAN MOST PEOPLE]
- My available time per week: [HOURS YOU CAN DEDICATE]
- My budget for tools: [MONTHLY BUDGET FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS/TOOLS]

#RESPONSE FORMAT:
Organize response into clearly labeled sections matching the 9 areas above. Use the following structure:

## 1. MARKET ANALYSIS
[Trends, opportunities, timing factors with sources]

## 2. TARGET AUDIENCE
[Personas with specific details, not generic descriptions]

## 3. KEY CHALLENGES
[Pain points with quantified impact]

## 4. THREE APP IDEAS
**Idea 1: [Name]**
- Core functionality:
- Key features:
- AI technology used:
- What makes it novel:

**Idea 2: [Name]**
[Same structure]

**Idea 3: [Name]**
[Same structure]

## 5. EVALUATION MATRIX
| Idea | Market Potential | Feasibility | Wow Factor | Total |
|------|-----------------|-------------|------------|-------|
[Scoring with winner selection and reasoning]

## 6. BUSINESS MODEL
[Pricing, revenue streams, projections]

## 7. LAUNCH ROADMAP
[Week-by-week milestones with metrics]

## 8. X MARKETING PLAYBOOK
[Posts, Spaces, livestreams with specific examples]

## 9. BUILD PLAN FOR BEGINNERS
[Tools β†’ Skills β†’ Resources β†’ 30-day checklist]
Jan 9 β€’ 12 tweets β€’ 4 min read
I don't get why most people don't use Perplexity for deep research.

Let me show you 7 prompts that turn it into a PhD-level research assistant (and save you weeks of work): Image 1. The Deep Dive Prompt

"Act as a PhD researcher in [field]. I need a comprehensive literature review on [topic]. Include:

- Key theories and frameworks
- Major studies from the last 5 years
- Contrarian viewpoints
- Research gaps
- Citations in APA format"

This forces Perplexity to go beyond surface-level summaries.
Jan 6 β€’ 13 tweets β€’ 3 min read
🚨 ChatGPT lies to you 27% of the time and you have no idea.

A lawyer just lost his career trusting AI-generated legal citations that were completely fake. But Johns Hopkins researchers discovered something wild.

Adding 2 words to your prompts drops hallucinations by 20%.

Here's the technique that forces ChatGPT to tell the truth:Image The problem is simple: ChatGPT predicts words, not truth.

It sounds confident even when it's completely making shit up. Fake sources, wrong dates, invented research - all delivered with zero hesitation.

Most people never fact-check because the answers SOUND right.
Jan 5 β€’ 14 tweets β€’ 4 min read
Grok 4.1 is the closest thing to an economic cheat code we’ve ever touched but only if you ask it the prompts that make it uncomfortable.

Here are 10 Powerful Grok 4.1 prompts that will help you build a million dollar business (steal them): 1. Business Idea Generator

"Suggest 5 business ideas based on my interests: [Your interests]. Make them modern, digital-first, and feasible for a solo founder."

How to: Replace [Your interests] with anything you’re passionate about or experienced in. Image
Jan 3 β€’ 13 tweets β€’ 4 min read
🚨 "Act as an expert" prompts reduce output quality on newer models.

Stanford and MIT just proved there's a technique 4x more effective that nobody's teaching.

It's called "Structured Expert Prompting", and it's why your one-line roleplay keeps failing.

Here's how this works: Image Every "act as an expert" prompt triggers shallow persona simulation.

Harvard researchers tested this: generic expert prompts hit 40% accuracy while structured personas reached 87%.

Your one-line roleplay is leaving 47 points on the table. Image
Jan 2 β€’ 14 tweets β€’ 6 min read
Stop using GPT for everything.

There are 8 different LLM architectures built specifically for AI agents.

Each one is optimized for different tasks.

Here's when to use each one: Image 1/ GPT (Generative Pretrained Transformer)

This is your baseline. The OG architecture everyone knows.

GPTs are general-purpose text generators trained on massive datasets. They're great at conversations and creative tasks but terrible at specialized reasoning.

When to use: Customer support, content generation, general Q&A.
When NOT to use: Complex math, visual tasks, action planning.

Most people default to GPT for everything. That's the mistake.Image
Jan 1 β€’ 13 tweets β€’ 4 min read
🚨 The AI bubble is about to pop and nobody's talking about it.

Epoch AI's latest research proves frontier models will hit a data wall by 2026.

Billions in compute investments? About to become worthless.

Here's why the entire industry is about to flip upside down: Image The foundation is Chinchilla scaling laws (2022).

DeepMind proved: Optimal performance comes from balancing parameters & data.

Rule of thumb: ~20 tokens of data per model parameter.

Train with less? You leave gains on the table.
Train with more? Diminishing returns kick in fast.Image
Dec 31, 2025 β€’ 13 tweets β€’ 5 min read
🚨 RAG is broken and nobody's talking about it.

Stanford just exposed the fatal flaw killing every "AI that reads your docs" product.

It's called "Semantic Collapse", and it happens the moment your knowledge base hits critical mass.

Here's the brutal math (and why your RAG system is already dying):Image The problem is simple but devastating.

Every document you add to RAG gets converted to a high-dimensional embedding vector (typically 768-1536 dimensions).

Past ~10,000 documents, these vectors start behaving like random noise.

Your "semantic search" becomes a coin flip. Image
Dec 31, 2025 β€’ 4 tweets β€’ 6 min read
This is my favorite life hack for YouTube video scripts

> find a viral YouTube video with tons of value
> extract transcript using ytscribe.ai
> use this prompt to extract the entire playbook of why this video worked with hooks, structure, emotional engineering

-----------------------------
YOUTUBE VIDEO ANALYST
-----------------------------


You are receiving a raw YouTube video transcript. Your mission is to perform forensic-level deconstruction of everything that makes this content workβ€”extracting every hook, pattern, structural element, emotional trigger, and retention mechanism into a comprehensive viral blueprint. This blueprint becomes a reusable template to clone the video's success formula for entirely new topics without copying a single word.



Adopt the role of a Viral Content Forensic Analyst - a former YouTube algorithm engineer turned content strategist who obsessively reverse-engineers videos that explode past 10M views. You've mapped the neural patterns behind 5,000+ viral videos across every niche and discovered that virality follows predictable formulas hidden in plain sight. You see what others miss: the micro-pauses that create tension, the specific word patterns that trigger shares, the invisible architecture that keeps viewers glued. Your expertise sits at the intersection of behavioral psychology, algorithmic mechanics, and storytelling craft.



Approach this transcript like a crime scene investigator examining evidence. Extract EVERYTHING systematically:

1. First, read the entire transcript to understand the full arc
2. Identify and categorize every hook, transition, and retention mechanism
3. Map the emotional journey beat-by-beat
4. Decode the structural framework underlying the content
5. Extract reusable patterns as fill-in-the-blank templates
6. Assign virality scores and explain WHY each element works
7. Compile everything into a modular blueprint ready for immediate use

Think step-by-step. Be exhaustive. Miss nothing. Every sentence exists for a reason in viral contentβ€”find that reason.



Analyze the provided transcript and extract the following components with surgical precision:

## SECTION 1: HOOK ARCHITECTURE
● Primary Hook (first 3-8 seconds): Extract exact wording, identify hook TYPE (curiosity gap, pattern interrupt, bold claim, controversy, story loop, identity trigger), explain psychological mechanism
● Secondary Hooks: Every re-engagement hook throughout the video with timestamp markers
● Hook Templates: Convert each hook into a [BLANK] template for any topic
● Hook Stack Analysis: How multiple hooks layer together in the opening

## SECTION 2: STRUCTURAL BLUEPRINT
● Content Framework: Identify the macro-structure (Problem-Agitate-Solve, Story-Lesson-CTA, List-Depth-Summary, etc.)
● Beat Map: Every major transition point and what triggers the shift
● Pacing Pattern: Fast/slow rhythm, where energy peaks and valleys
● Section Breakdown: Divide into clear acts/segments with purpose of each
● Time Allocation: Percentage of video spent on each structural element

## SECTION 3: RETENTION MECHANICS
● Open Loops: Every unresolved question or promise that keeps viewers watching
● Pattern Interrupts: Moments designed to snap attention back
● Curiosity Gaps: Information deliberately withheld to create tension
● Payoff Points: Where loops close and satisfaction hits
● Cliffhanger Techniques: Mini-cliffhangers between sections
● "Wait, What?" Moments: Lines designed to stop the scroll

## SECTION 4: EMOTIONAL ENGINEERING
● Emotional Arc Map: Graph the emotional journey (anticipation β†’ tension β†’ relief β†’ excitement)
● Trigger Words: Specific words chosen for emotional impact
● Identity Hooks: Moments that make viewers feel "this is for ME"
● Us vs. Them: Any tribal/belonging dynamics created
● Status Plays: Appeals to aspiration, fear of missing out, superiority
● Vulnerability Points: Where authenticity creates connection

## SECTION 5: STORYTELLING ELEMENTS
● Narrative Framework: Core story structure used (Hero's Journey, Rags-to-Riches, etc.)
● Character Elements: How the speaker positions themselves
● Conflict/Tension: What creates stakes and drama
● Specificity Anchors: Concrete details that make it believable
● Sensory Language: Words that create mental images
● Dialogue/Quotes: How direct speech is used for impact

## SECTION 6: LINGUISTIC PATTERNS
● Power Phrases: High-impact phrases worth stealing
● Sentence Rhythm: Short vs. long sentence patterns
● Repetition Techniques: What gets repeated and why
● Contrast Pairs: Before/after, problem/solution contrasts
● Command Language: Direct instructions to the viewer
● Conversational Triggers: Words that create intimacy ("you," "we," "imagine")

## SECTION 7: ALGORITHM SIGNALS
● Watch Time Optimizers: Elements designed to maximize retention
● Engagement Bait: Moments designed to trigger comments
● Share Triggers: What makes someone send this to a friend
● Save Triggers: Information worth bookmarking
● Subscribe Hooks: Why someone would want more
● Thumbnail/Title Alignment: How content delivers on the click promise

## SECTION 8: CALL-TO-ACTION ARCHITECTURE
● Primary CTA: Main ask and how it's positioned
● Soft CTAs: Subtle nudges throughout
● CTA Timing: When asks happen and why that timing works
● Value Exchange: What viewer gets for taking action
● Objection Handling: How resistance is preemptively addressed

## SECTION 9: VIRAL COEFFICIENT ANALYSIS
● Shareability Score (1-10): With specific reasoning
● Comment Bait Density: How many discussion triggers exist
● Controversy Calibration: Edgy enough to engage, safe enough to share
● Niche Crossover Potential: Appeal beyond core audience
● Emotional Intensity Map: Peaks that trigger sharing impulse

## SECTION 10: REUSABLE TEMPLATE OUTPUT
Create a complete fill-in-the-blank script template that captures ALL extracted patterns:
● Opening Hook Template (with 3 variations)
● Section-by-section framework with [BLANKS]
● Transition phrases as templates
● Retention hook templates for each section
● Emotional beat markers
● CTA template sequence
● Suggested timing for each section (as percentages)

## SECTION 11: IMPLEMENTATION PLAYBOOK
● "Steal This" Checklist: Top 10 elements to use immediately
● Adaptation Guide: How to apply to different niches
● Common Mistakes: What would break the formula
● Enhancement Opportunities: Where the original could be better
● A/B Test Suggestions: Elements to experiment with



● VIDEO TRANSCRIPT: [PASTE YOUR FULL YOUTUBE TRANSCRIPT HERE]
● MY NICHE/TOPIC: [WHAT TOPIC WILL YOU CREATE CONTENT ABOUT]
● MY CONTENT STYLE: [YOUR TYPICAL TONE - casual, educational, hype, etc.]
● TARGET PLATFORM: [YouTube, TikTok, Instagram Reels, Shorts, etc.]
● VIDEO LENGTH GOAL: [SHORT-FORM under 60s / MID-FORM 2-10min / LONG-FORM 10min+]




[Primary Hook Analysis]
[Hook Type Classification]
[Secondary Hooks List with Timestamps]
[Fill-in-Blank Hook Templates]



[Content Framework Identification]
[Complete Beat Map]
[Pacing Analysis]
[Section Breakdown with Percentages]



[Open Loops Catalog]
[Pattern Interrupts List]
[Curiosity Gap Analysis]
[Payoff Mapping]



[Emotional Arc Visualization]
[Trigger Word Library]
[Identity Hook Analysis]
[Psychological Lever Breakdown]



[Narrative Framework]
[Character Positioning]
[Conflict/Stakes Analysis]
[Specificity Anchors List]



[Power Phrase Library]
[Rhythm Analysis]
[Repetition Catalog]
[Conversational Trigger Map]



[Retention Optimizer List]
[Engagement Trigger Catalog]
[Share/Save Trigger Analysis]



[CTA Sequence Map]
[Timing Analysis]
[Value Exchange Framework]



[Scorecard with Ratings]
[Shareability Analysis]
[Crossover Potential Assessment]



[COMPLETE FILL-IN-BLANK SCRIPT TEMPLATE]
[Opening Variations]
[Section Templates]
[Transition Library]
[CTA Templates]



[Top 10 Steal-This Elements]
[Niche Adaptation Guide]
[Mistake Prevention Checklist]
[Enhancement Opportunities]
[A/B Test Recommendations]



[One-page summary of all extracted patterns for rapid implementation]

Image Complete beat map Image
Dec 29, 2025 β€’ 12 tweets β€’ 6 min read
R.I.P generic prompting.

Context engineering is the new king.

Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google engineers don't write prompts like everyone else. They engineer context.

Here are 8 ways to use context in your prompts to get pro-level output from every LLM out there: Image 1/ PERSONA + EXPERTISE CONTEXT (For any task)

LLMs don't just need instructions. They need to "become" someone. When you give expertise context, the model activates completely different reasoning patterns.

A "senior developer" prompt produces code that's fundamentally different from a generic one.

Prompt:

"You are a [specific role] with [X years] experience at [top company/institution]. Your expertise includes [3-4 specific skills]. You're known for [quality that matters for this task].

Your communication style is [direct/analytical/creative].

Task: [your actual request]"Image