The more AI has been integrated into our lives, the more annoying it’s becoming. Every time I see the word “precise” now, I cringe, knowing that the person was too lazy to think of a better word. It’s “the” AI word to sound smart. I saw a few of our meta descriptions written like that and whoever is inputting that is doing a job. In many ways it’s better than a stupid human flunking around. In another, I know I can do better.

An AI Experience

Here is a quick AI experience that left me frustrated.

Just Stop

Notice the idiot needs “precise” design control.

I was also reading how there isn’t enough computing power to process the token system. One of the reasons I bought CoreWeave stock.

This gets annoying when you have to wait 30 seconds for this AI dumbass to screw up what you’re asking it to do. I carefully call this future overlord an idiot or dumbass, but I’ll take my chances today and repent for my sins later.

I also paid for Claude today and was moderately impressed with its SEO impact. I followed some advice Evan showed me, and it’s odd because you want to treat this tool as gospel—that its recommendations are correct. You’ll notice I fed my writing into AI by the long -.

Yet, my AI’s recommendations are conflicting with the agency we hired. Obviously, I think I know better because it’s my business, but when my agency is adding “precise” to the meta descriptions, what am I supposed to think about who’s actually doing the work? We’re both using AI to solve this SEO homework.

Which brings me to an overlap of AI and what I believe will eventually bring back more human response. As in, humans will try harder. AI will push us to be better.

I read an article about how AI was finding errors in human coding written in the ’80s that no one has looked at in decades. This type of assistance is monumental from AI. It will find its role, and who knows how much deeper it will go. I’m ready to bow down once it reads this post.