ChatGPT Voice Mode FAQ: Fixes for Not Being Able to Speak and Not Hearing Audio
Many people using voice mode for the first time run into issues like “tapping does nothing,” “can’t hear,” “can’t speak,” or “recognition goes haywire.” Below, organized by the most common scenarios, we clearly explain where to find the settings, how to check permissions, and the troubleshooting order—so you can usually pinpoint the cause and restore normal use within a few minutes. Voice mode won’t open: first check whether the entry point and permissions are being blocked If the voice button is gray or it exits immediately when tapped, first check whether microphone permission has been granted to the browser or app. On iPhone, go to “Settings - Privacy & Security - Microphone”; on Android, confirm it’s allowed under “App permissions.”
Midjourney FAQ: Login issues, insufficient permissions, and image generation failures
When using Midjourney to generate images, the most common sticking points aren’t prompts, but login, permissions, queues, and image loading. Below, I break down Midjourney’s most frequent issues by scenario and provide steps you can immediately use to self-check. When you encounter similar errors, troubleshoot in order first—usually there’s no need to reinstall or switch accounts. What to do if you can’t log in or keep getting sent back to the login page If login fails on the Midjourney web app, first test in an incognito/private window to rule out browser cache and extension interference. If you log in to M via Discord authorization
Claude Feature Comparison: Differences in How to Use Projects and Artifacts
In Claude, doing the same thing through different entry points can lead to very different efficiency. Regular chat is suitable for quick Q&A, Projects is better for long-term tasks, and Artifacts pulls out “editable deliverables” into a separate space. Below, based on real usage scenarios, we’ll clearly explain the differences among these three parts of Claude. Regular Chat: Fastest for getting information, but context is most likely to drift Regular chat is Claude’s lightest mode—handy for asking something on the fly, getting an outline of ideas, or rewriting a few sentences. Its key feature is a low startup cost.
Detailed explanation of Claude 3.5’s computer use feature: viewing the screen, clicking the mouse, and auto-typing in the API
Claude 3.5’s most eye-catching update this time is pushing “conversation” into “action”: it can see the screen, move the cursor, click buttons, and enter text. For developers, Claude 3.5 no longer just gives suggestions—it can complete tasks step by step within the interface. What exactly is Claude 3.5 “computer use”? Claude 3.5 offers the “computer use” capability in a public beta, with the core idea being to let the model use a computer interface like a human.
Midjourney Prompt Tutorial: From writing the structure correctly from scratch to generating images with consistent style
If you want to use Midjourney smoothly, the key isn’t “try a few more times,” but getting the prompt structure right. The Midjourney tutorial below walks you, in order, from beginner level to stable reuse, teaching you how to combine descriptions, reference images, and parameters into a controllable image-generation workflow. First, build the “skeleton” of a Midjourney prompt In Midjourney, it’s recommended to write “subject + action/state + scene + lighting + camera/style” first, then add details—don’t start by piling on adjectives. The subject should be specific enough to be drawable.


