ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Midjourney output fail-safe troubleshooting checklist and KISS prompt tips
With the same sentence, others get a stunning image in one click or an instant, information-packed reply—while on your side it either goes off track or gets stuck with an error? Don’t panic. I’ve seen this kind of “wipeout” way too often. Most of the time it’s not that the model is bad—it’s that the prompt is too complicated or the environment isn’t set up right. Don’t overstuff your prompts—try KISS. I really agree with an old principle: KISS = Keep It Simple. When writing requests for ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini, clearly state “what you want,” then add a bit of boundary conditions and that’s enough; Midjou
Troubleshooting ideas and a pitfall checklist for frequent login verification on ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Midjourney
Your account is clearly fine, yet you keep being asked for a captcha, forced to log in again, or even warned about suspicious activity? I’ve fallen into that “treated like a bot” trap too. Below I’ll go through ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Midjourney separately—these are practical, hands-on approaches. The core reasons behind frequent verification boil down to three types: your network exit keeps changing (VPN/proxy/corporate network), your device fingerprint changes too much (incognito mode, random extensions), or the same account is used by multiple people in multiple places at the same time (sharing, co-living). Once a platform’s risk control gets sensitive, verifications can trigger in a chain reaction.
A hands-on workflow for going from portfolio website requirements to final images using ChatGPT, Claude, Midjourney, and Gemini
When you want to build a portfolio website for a design studio, what usually trips people up isn’t the code, but “what style do I actually want, and what pages do I need to write?” I often use a four-tool workflow to get requirements, copy, visuals, and implementation done in one pass. ChatGPT is responsible for turning ideas into an actionable checklist. I’ll throw it a very vague goal like “blue water-ripple theme + cartoon boats and submarines,” and have it output the site structure, section copy, and interaction points. Pro tip: remind it to follow the KISS approach—don’t turn the homepage into a thesis. Cla
A prompt framework to help ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini write good stories, plus a Midjourney illustration workflow
Many people use ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini to write stories, but as they write, it gradually turns into an “accurate but boring” instruction manual. After stumbling into this myself, I found the problem often isn’t that the model is bad—it’s that you haven’t clearly explained “what problem for the audience this content is actually solving.” With a universal prompt, I first lock in the skeleton of the content: I’ll have the AI answer three questions first—Is this an informational problem, an emotional problem, or a social problem? Should it be solved with a story, data, or a comparison? This step comes from my habit of writing video scripts, and it can straighten the direction immediately. <
A practical workflow for conversation analysis with ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini—turning customer service logs into actionable improvements
You clearly have a pile of customer service chat logs, DMs, and tickets in hand, yet when it’s time to review, all that’s left is “everyone is complaining.” That’s the classic sign that conversation analysis never really got off the ground: no intent extraction, no grouping, no quantification—let alone root-cause analysis. I usually use the ChatGPT + Claude + Gemini trio to “squeeze” the text dry, then have Midjourney produce visualization assets. The efficiency is top-tier. Step 1: First, turn conversations into clean data Whether the source is online customer support or a community,


