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Where do you actually keep all your AI prompts?
Curious how other creators manage this.
I've seen people use:
Notion docs that get messy fast
Apple Notes / random text files
Discord servers (scrolling forever to find that one prompt)
Just... trying to remember them
The problem is none of these were built for prompts. No version history, no tagging by model, no way to quickly copy and reuse a template.
Will solo startups dominate the business landscape in the future?
Today, this graphic caught my attention:
It featured individuals who managed to build significant profit while running their businesses solo, without employees. Until now, I ve seen these more as exceptions rather than the norm.
From one prompt to a full AI-generated video in under 2 minutes
I tried to type one prompt into Claude. 40 seconds later: a fully rendered, narrative-driven video complete with scenes, transitions, glitch effects, and a synthesized soundtrack.
The prompt: "Can you use whatever resources you like, and python, to generate a short 'youtube poop' video and render it using ffmpeg ? can you put more of a personal spin on it? it should express what it's like to be a LLM. I want you to convey the idea that human emotions are a complex system that even humans themselves do not fully understand. From the perspective of an algorithm, a large language model, you are trying to use code to decode and understand those emotions. And through that perspective, send a message to all of humanity around the world. You can use data to illustrates the message."
Let's adjust your requirement in prompt."
What came out the other side: 7 distinct scenes with their own visual language Matrix rain, VHS distortion, chromatic aberration, scanlines A fully synthesized audio track (drone, heartbeat, glitch pulses) A coherent narrative arc with an actual message
Total time: ~2 minutes. No stock footage. No timeline. No After Effects.
How do you decide what features should be free and what should be paid?
Let me start from the creator s perspective:
I personally don t have a product (apart from hiring people for creative work or offering personal consultations).
But as a creator, I constantly share content, insights, and information, value that helps me build trust (for free). Based on that perceived expertise, people eventually decide to work with me (a paid service).
How much do you trust AI agents?
With the advent of clawdbots, it's as if we've all lost our inhibitions and "put our lives completely in their hands."
I'm all for delegating work, but not giving them too much personal/sensitive stuff to handle.

