When Should You Rewrite Your AI Prompts?
Know when to tweak your AI prompts vs starting fresh? I treat prompt engineering like software development – iterate when you’re close, reboot when the foundation is broken.
Know when to tweak your AI prompts vs starting fresh? I treat prompt engineering like software development – iterate when you’re close, reboot when the foundation is broken.
After 8 years with AI, I’ve learned the secret isn’t perfect prompts – it’s iteration. Treat each response as feedback, refine your approach, and know when to start over.
After 8 years with AI, I finally figured out why some people get great results while others just get frustrated: they’re trying to solve everything at once instead of breaking it down.
Breaking complex coding problems into smaller chunks gets better AI results than fancy prompts. After 30+ years coding, I’ve learned the real skill is decomposition, not prompt engineering.
Most AI coding assistants are just fancy autocomplete. After testing them all, I found one that actually understands software development – not just syntax, but architecture, workflows, and the full dev lifecycle.
After 30 years of coding, most AI assistants disappoint. Roo Code for VS Code actually gets it right – understands your whole codebase, not just files, and helps without getting in the way.
After 30 years in software, I learned that working with AI isn’t about the tool – it’s about developing the right skills. Clear prompts, breaking problems into chunks, careful delegation, and treating AI like you manage people makes all the difference.
After 30 years coding and 8 in AI, I learned there’s no “best” coding assistant – just the right match for your task. Context matters more than capabilities, and mastering how you work with AI beats picking the fanciest tool.
Your AI coding assistant’s confident answers might be dead wrong. After 30 years of coding, here’s how to spot the red flags before your code breaks in production.
Knowing when to iterate a prompt versus starting over mirrors debugging versus refactoring code. I break down the exact signals that tell you which path to take.
After 30 years coding and 8 in AI, I’ve found one skill that changes everything: breaking problems into clean chunks before asking AI for help. Most people skip this step and wonder why their results are messy.
Companies waste six figures on AI tools that sit unused because they focused on what the tech can do instead of what humans actually need. The real efficiency gains come from mapping your team’s workflow first, then building AI around that.
Most AI projects fail after demo day – not because the tech doesn’t work, but because nobody wants to use it. Learn how to build AI that people actually adopt.
AI coding tools fail when they run wild, but spec-driven development with custom instructions creates rails that keep AI aligned with your team’s standards and architecture.
After 40 years building software, I noticed smart people burning out on tasks that could be automated. So I built Creative Robot – a platform that writes and posts blog content for you.
Built Creative Robot to solve content creation stress for business owners who post once then vanish for weeks. Automated service writes and publishes your content while you run your business. First month free, no contract required.
After 30+ years coding, I tested every assistant. The best one isn’t flashy – it bends to your process with custom modes, deep codebase understanding, and privacy control.
My dev team went from AI chaos to “agents on rails” – custom AI instructions that turn unpredictable coding assistants into reliable spec-following tools.
Teams waste months building features that miss the mark. The fix? Train AI coding assistants with detailed specs and custom instructions instead of using them as autocomplete.
After 30+ years of coding, I found an AI assistant that actually gets it. Roo Code isn’t just autocomplete – it understands your whole project and cuts down grunt work so you can focus on real problems.
Found Roo Code – an open-source AI assistant that understands your entire project, not just autocompletes. Has different modes for coding, debugging, architecture planning.
Most developers are using AI wrong and getting left behind. The real skill isn’t writing code anymore – it’s knowing how to collaborate with AI to build better software faster.
Roo Code is an open-source VS Code extension that lets you use any AI model with your own API key. Unlike locked ecosystems, you can customize different modes for debugging, architecture, and prototyping while keeping full control.
Unlike other AI coding tools, Roo Code runs locally with offline support, uses separate models for different tasks, and keeps your proprietary code private.
Tired of slow coding and endless boilerplate? Roo Code is an open-source AI assistant that runs locally in VS Code, turning plain English into working code while you stay in control.
Most teams fail with AI coding tools because they give vague requests instead of detailed specs. The secret is training your AI assistant with clear specifications and feedback loops.
While we’re worried about AI taking jobs, it’s quietly stealing something more valuable – our ability to connect. Global emotional intelligence has dropped 5.54% since 2019. But AI can’t fake genuine empathy.
Most AI fails because nobody considers how humans actually work with it. 63% of problems are human factors, not tech issues. Success requires understanding psychology, not just algorithms.
Companies waste millions on AI projects that fail because consultants build complex systems teams can’t maintain. Real results come from treating AI as a business tool, not magic.
Most teams build AI workflows backwards – focusing on tech instead of human problems. Start with daily pain points, map decision bottlenecks, build small automations that save minutes.
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