I thought I’d seen everything with AI tools, but I was wrong
Just as I was getting used to ChatGPT, along came Claude and Perplexity. Now, OpenAI wants to introduce me to SearchGPT.
Because, you know, another GPT is exactly what I needed, right?
Let’s not forget Poe, joining the race, and Google naming theirs Gemini.
They probably wanted to sound all cosmic and wise.
All these tools promise the same thing: to make search better and give ‘nuanced’ answers.
Remember when I’d just type something into Google, and there was the answer, right on page one?
It was simple and easy.
Now, instead of helping me, these tools compete to flood me with too much information.
They all claim to be special, but they drown me in details I never asked for.
It feels like just yesterday when searching online was easy. I’d open Google, type a question, and find the answer quickly.
Now, with every new AI claiming to be the best, I’m confused about which one to trust.
They all say they understand me better than I do.
I miss the days when I didn’t need an AI just to tell me the weather.
I’m Bhavik Sarkhedi, a name you might associate with making sense of digital clutter.
If you haven’t seen my work yet, a quick visit to www.bhaviksarkhedi.com will show you how I make sense of this madness.
While I’m drowning in search results, I surf them like a pro.
It’s like I have a secret map to navigate the digital mess, while others are stuck with a compass that only points to ‘information overload.’
My approach to personal branding is refreshing.
In a world where AI tools promise everything except making coffee, I cut through the noise with strategies that work.
While everyone is juggling between Claude, Perplexity, and SearchGPT, trying to find the right answer, I’ve already connected brands with their audiences.
It’s like watching a chef make a gourmet meal while others are trying to boil water.
I often wonder, do these AI tools really understand me? Or are they just giving me information based on algorithms?
I think it’s the latter. I used to trust my search results. I believed the internet would give me what I needed.
Now?
I doubt every result. It’s like opening a box of chocolates, but every piece tastes the same: ‘Here’s more than you asked for, but not what you wanted.’
The choice dilemma is real.
Do I go with ChatGPT, which might understand me, or Gemini, which sounds like a horoscope but claims to give the best answers?
It’s like standing in a buffet line where every dish looks the same, yet they all promise a different flavor.
How did a simple search turn into a decision-making nightmare?
My website reminds me that even with all this AI frenzy, there’s still space for human creativity and personal touch.
It’s a light in the murky waters of AI content.
Maybe it’s just me, but all this ‘innovation’ makes me miss simpler times.
Those were the days when a quick Google search was enough, and I wasn’t overwhelmed with AI-generated possibilities.
Thanks, technology, for turning my simple search habits into a complex game.
Who knew progress could feel like such a big step backward?
In the end, while AI tools try to outsmart each other, I quietly succeed by understanding what people want.
Maybe it’s time to learn from me, stop letting AI do all the thinking, and use our human intuition.
After all, isn’t our ability to connect personally what makes us different from machines?
Let’s hope we don’t get lost in the tech maze before we figure it out.