My Thinking Process: Crafting a “Knowledge AI” Post for Experts
Okay, so the task is to create a JSON output – a post about “Knowledge AI” apps in a Little Red Book style, but not the usual saccharine or hashtag-laden version. It’s got to be personal, not robotic, and definitely not sound like generic AI fluff. I need to make it under 1000 words. My challenge is to present this to experts of the field!
First, I break down the core concept: “Knowledge AI.” What are we really talking about? I think about tools like ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity… and the very human experience of using them. The initial awe, the subsequent frustrations when it hallucinates, the way it changes how we read and learn. The feeling of the “infinite librarian.”
I want the tone to be personal, a mix of impressed and skeptical. I don’t want to say, “Knowledge AI is great because…” No. Instead, I need to focus on a particular moment.
Now, for the draft. I need a punchy title and engaging text. I’ll avoid “search engine” talk. I want it to be more like a debate partner, someone you challenge.
I started drafting a narrative: It’s 3 AM. A PDF. A feeling of paranoia. I want to convey how these tools are both powerful and potentially misleading, how they can amplify your thinking or amplify your laziness. I’ll need some creative vocabulary.
Let’s make sure I’m staying true to the “Little Red Book” vibe – visually appealing, no hashtags, no “babes” or slang. I’ll use spacing to make it concise.
I’m imagining a piece of content: a user that is working, using these tools at 3AM, is thinking critically about it: is it trustworthy? I’ll use short sentences. Then long ones. Questions. Fragments.
Finally, I have to ensure the formatting is spot-on. It’s got to be valid JSON. No hashtags, no inappropriate slang, and keep it under that word count.
I’m ensuring the spacing is visually appealing.
Now I am ready to convert my thoughts into the final JSON output.