ChatGPT Feature Comparison: How to Choose Between Chat, Images, Files, and Voice
Many people think ChatGPT is only for “chatting,” but in real use the biggest efficiency gap comes from how you choose and combine capabilities like conversation, images, file analysis, and voice. This article compares ChatGPT features using the same set of work scenarios to help you judge what problems each feature is best suited to solve. After reading, you’ll know which ones to use regularly and which to turn on only for specific tasks. Conversation: Great as a baseline, but you need to “constrain the output” In ChatGPT feature comparisons, pure text conversation is the most stable foundational capability, suitable for
ChatGPT Feature Comparison: How to Choose Between Regular Chat, GPTs, and Projects
Even when using ChatGPT, different entry points can make a big difference in efficiency. Many people cram all their needs into a single chat box, which leads to messy information and makes reuse difficult. Below, using a “ChatGPT feature comparison” approach, we’ll break down regular chat, GPTs, and Projects to make things clear, so you can choose the right tool for the task. Regular chat: the fastest to start, but the easiest to become scattered Regular chat is ChatGPT’s most common format, suitable for quick questions, fast copy edits, and one-off idea checks. Its advantage is a low startup cost.
Money-saving tips for Claude Opus 4.6: Use conversation structure to spend your quota where it matters most
Using Claude Opus 4.6 for deep writing and code review is great, but it burns through your quota faster too. If you want to save money, it’s not about “asking less,” but about maximizing the value of each prompt. The methods below can make Claude Opus 4.6 more efficient, reducing meaningless back-and-forth and overly long context. Write your requirements clearly upfront: get it right in one ask, with fewer follow-up additions A lot of quota is wasted on follow-up questions like “What format do you want?” or “You’re missing background information.” Before using Claude Opus 4.6, first clearly write out your goal, audience, output
Midjourney Troubleshooting: Jobs Stuck on Running, Download Failures, and Permission Fixes
When creating images, the most annoying thing isn’t waiting in line—it’s that you’re clearly being charged GPU time yet nothing ever comes out. This article troubleshoots Midjourney issues in the order I most often use: platform first, then account, and finally local. It focuses on stuck jobs, images that won’t open / downloads that fail, and Discord permissions and login authorization issues. Follow the steps one by one and you can usually pinpoint the cause within a few minutes. Start Midjourney troubleshooting: platform status and account restrictions Before you start Midjourney troubleshooting, first rule out platform flu
Midjourney Tutorial: Getting Started with Image Prompts and Reverse-Engineering Prompts via /describe
This Midjourney tutorial focuses specifically on two shortcuts for “writing prompts from images”: Image Prompts and reverse-engineering prompts with /describe. You don’t need to struggle to write English from scratch—just use a reference image to quickly get usable prompts, then iterate toward results that match what you want. Below, in operational order, I’ll clearly explain the key steps and the common pitfalls. Enter the Midjourney creation page: Get the basic entry point working first After opening the Midjourney official website and logging in, go to the cre


