Claude Feature Comparison: How to Choose Between Projects, Artifacts, and Regular Chats
Asking the same question in Claude—whether in a regular chat, within a Project, or output via Artifacts—creates noticeably different experiences. This article provides a comparison of Claude’s features to help you understand the differences among the three in terms of “instruction inheritance, information management, and output format.” Choosing the right entry point means less repeated explanation of your needs and makes it easier to turn content into reusable deliverables. Regular Chat: Fastest to start, but the most “short-lived” context Regular chats are suitable for temporary questions: quick Q&A, one-off revisions, rapid brainstorming. Its advantage
Comparison of Midjourney Relax vs. Fast Modes: How to Choose Between Generation Speed and Cost
In Midjourney, the same prompt can lead to very different experiences depending on the mode. The core difference between Relax and Fast isn’t image quality, but queue speed and how usage is deducted. Choosing the right mode helps you keep Midjourney’s output efficiency and costs under better control. What problems do Relax and Fast solve respectively? Midjourney’s Fast mode is built for “generate now”—it typically enters the generation queue faster, making it suitable for tight deadlines or when you need multiple rounds of rapid iteration. Relax
Midjourney Account Switching & Multi-Device Login Guide: Binding Checks and Common Sticking Points
If you want to switch Midjourney accounts on the same computer or across multiple devices, the key is to distinguish between a “Discord account” and “Midjourney authorization.” This Midjourney tutorial explains the switching path, binding checks, and common errors in one go to help you avoid account mix-ups, insufficient permissions, and command failures. First, understand this: Midjourney login relies on Discord authorization Midjourney’s web version essentially logs in via Discord OAuth; what you see on the web pa
ChatGPT Money-Saving Tips: Reduce Usage with Batch Questions and Template Reuse
If you don’t want to keep paying for tools over and over, the key is to maximize the “information output” from each conversation. This set of ChatGPT money-saving tips focuses on cutting pointless back-and-forth and reducing trial-and-error, so you can still get great work done even with free quotas. You don’t need more complicated settings—just a different way to ask questions and organize things. Bundle scattered questions into one request to reduce back-and-forth communication For many people, the most costly part of using ChatGPT isn’t the question itself, but “thinking of one and asking one.” It’s better to first make a checklist in a notes app and merge needs on the same topic into a single request, for example:
Introduction to the new ChatGPT Canvas feature: making collaboration in writing and programming more efficient
Canvas, recently added to ChatGPT, is a new feature that combines “conversation” and an “editable workspace.” It solves the old problem of repeatedly copying and pasting and losing context after editing a section, letting you write, revise, and debug code on the same page while continuing to discuss with ChatGPT. What is ChatGPT Canvas: an extra editing area beside the conversation In ChatGPT Canvas, you no longer see only a stream of chat history; instead, you can put an article or code in


