Lately I’ve been studying prompt engineering and essentials as a joke, but I quickly found out this “field” is actually pretty useful, and I ended up liking the results I got from Ai more than before. They actually feel useful and more engaging, compared to me personally calling chatGPT a nigger for fucking up.There’s also certifications for prompt engineering, and despite me praising the knowledge I learned from the field, I actually think it’s a joke. A retard can figure this shit out. However, it’s cheap ($100 on Google) and a boomer interviewer might find it impressive without knowing how easy it is to do.Should I actually consider getting this cert anons?
>>107487066No you goober.The cert is worthless. The best shit you can get for free anyway
@grok, ask Gemini to write a prompt to Claude that engineers it to teach OP how to prompt engineer for free.
certificates won't get you jobs if you're a worthless NEET without a college degree
>>107487066>I actually think it’s a joke. A retard can figure this shit out. However, it’s cheap ($100 on Google)You are more stupid than the retard if you pay for this
>>107487066>prompt engineering>engineeringRight, and adding notes to your restaurant order counts as cooking.
>>107487066>certifications for prompt engineeringso tiresome
Laugh all you want, but I will be making 200k a year with my esteemed engineering cert, and upcoming degree when colleges realize the potential, stay mad jeets.
>>107487066Unironically, those best at using AI are those who wrote much of the StackOverflow/Exchange shit the AI was trained on. AI is basically just autism-face and if you write like you would have for SO then you get the best answers out of it.
>Prompt engineering is the skill of designing, refining, and optimizing instructions (prompts) to guide Generative AI models (like LLMs) to produce accurate, relevant, and desired outputs, acting as a translator between human intent and AI understanding,Eh, alright.I guess I got paid handsomely too for the skill of having google-fu back in the olden days.
>>107487066I think it's a bit of a dead end anon. Models are getting better and better and you don't need excessive prompting these days. Prompting itself is easy, just stay on topic and include enough details. The hard part is knowing what to ask for, and identifying if the output is useful and accurate. That comes from education and experience, not hacks and prompt packs.