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How to Think Like an AI and Write Prompts That Never Fail

nextechtide.blogspot.com

3 points by zero-ground-445 3 months ago · 4 comments

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zero-ground-445OP 3 months ago

Prompt engineering itself doesn’t evolve rapidly - but the models it depends on change all the time. Every new generation of large language models comes with new reasoning layers, expanded context windows, modified decoding defaults, and new forms of safety alignment. These shifts alter how models interpret, prioritize, and execute instructions. A prompt that produces clean, reliable output one week might start producing verbose or inconsistent results after a silent update. The role of a prompt engineer is therefore not just to write good prompts, but to detect, analyze, and adapt to these changes. Successful practitioners treat prompt design as an ongoing process of experimentation rather than a fixed discipline.

  • JumpCrisscross 3 months ago

    > Prompt engineering itself doesn’t evolve rapidly

    It shouldn't have to. Prompt engineering is a benevolent analog to SEO. It's a measure of how broken the system is. The sign that LLMs have reached maturity should involve, in part, the obsolescence of prompt engineering.

    • treetalker 3 months ago

      I was going to say that I, as an informed non-technical user, expect to be able to interact with an LLM as I would with a human. The more I have to stray from what I would naturally say, the worse the LLM is.

zero-ground-445OP 3 months ago

I think it is a matter of perspective. First, many of us wants something (or someone) that would do our work for us. It started with physical work, now it getting to knowledge work. Let's not discuss where that direction leaves us (well... in oblivion obviously), but I have bad news for you in any case. There will be no free lunch. When the bubble bursts we will find out how expensive and vulnerable AI is. Making predictions is not my thing, but most likely we will end up with some Higher Level Programming language. That will address unpredictable AI output, injections, etc. And once again, non-technical users will have hard time using it. A historical example - SQL, it was originally envisioned as a tool for "non-technical" users. It's already happening. Here is just one example of today: https://kiro.dev/blog/introducing-kiro/. And the concept of a "spec" is just one step forward to how gen AI will look like tomorrow. All I can say, enjoy the trial period and try to make the most of it. It will not last long.

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