ChatGPT Conversation Management Guide: Archiving, Renaming, Share Links, and Data Export
After using ChatGPT for a long time, many people find their conversation list getting more and more cluttered, and it can take forever to dig up an old record. This ChatGPT tutorial focuses specifically on how to organize conversations, how to share them, and how to export data in ChatGPT when you need a backup. Quick organization in the ChatGPT sidebar: rename, delete, and archive After opening the ChatGPT web version or app, the conversation list is on the left. Hover your mouse over a conversation to reveal more action options. The most practical first step is to “Rename” it, using a “project name + purpose” format so you can spot it at a glance later in ChatGPT. Only delete conversations after you’re sure you don’t need them; for content involving privacy, it’s recommended to delete it directly rather than letting it sit there long-term. If you don’t want to delete a conversation but also don’t want it taking up space in the list, you can “Archive” it to tuck it away. Archived conversations are usually moved to an archive section and can be restored when needed. This is less hassle than repeatedly creating new chats and also keeps the ChatGPT sidebar tidy.
Midjourney User Guide: Join Discord, Generate Your First Image, and Common Commands
This Midjourney tutorial is designed to address the three things beginners most often get stuck on: how to get into Discord and find a usable channel, how to use /imagine to generate your first image, and how to continue upscaling and editing after the image is generated. Follow the steps below and you can usually get Midjourney up and running—and reuse it reliably—within about ten minutes. 1. Preparation Before You Start: A Discord Account and Midjourney Login Midjourney mainly works through Discord, so first register and log in to Discord, then go to the Midjourney website and click “Join the Discord” to enter the official server. After you enter the server, you’ll usually need to agree to the rules or complete a simple verification. Once that’s done, you’ll be able to use Midjourney commands normally in the channels.
ChatGPT Feature Comparison: Differences Between Canvas and Regular Chat for Writing and Coding
Whether you’re using ChatGPT to write copy, revise drafts, or review code, choosing “Regular Chat” or “Canvas” directly affects efficiency. This article compares the features to help you pick the right entry point by task type, and provides a smoother way to use each. Regular Chat: Best for quick communication and idea exploration Regular chat is ChatGPT’s most general-purpose entry point. Its strength is how smoothly you can ask follow-up questions back and forth, making it great for brainstorming, outlining, weighing options, and asking for concepts and examples. You can keep adding constraints so ChatGPT gradually converges on what you want.
Claude Opus 4.6 Feature Comparison: How to Choose Between Writing, Coding, and Multi-file Analysis
Using Claude Opus 4.6 to complete the same task can yield very different results depending on how you use it. This article breaks down and compares three common Claude Opus 4.6 scenarios: long-form writing, coding work, and multi-file analysis. After reading, you’ll be able to decide more quickly which “working mode” Claude Opus 4.6 should use. The key to comparing Claude Opus 4.6: goals, constraints, and verifiability When using Claude Opus 4.6, first clarify whether the output should prioritize “readability” or “executability.” Long-form writing cares more about structure and consistent tone; coding tasks care more about reproducible steps and boundary conditions; multi-file analysis cares more about cited evidence and not missing information. Spell these three things out clearly, and Claude Opus 4.6’s performance will usually be much more stable.
Midjourney Money-Saving Tips: Prompts and Workflow Habits That Reduce Wasted Generations
If you want to save money with Midjourney, the key isn’t “generating less,” but “redoing less.” Treat every generation as a process of making trade-offs: quickly lock in a direction first, then spend your compute on the crucial refinements. The small habits below can noticeably reduce ineffective generations and repeated rerolls. Start with small-step trial and error: use sketches to set the direction, then move to high resolution In Midjourney, the most expensive thing isn’t a single generation—it’s “gambling on luck” over and over on the same image. It’s recommended to first use clearer composition and style descriptions to screen with rough drafts, and once you pick a version close to the goal, then upscale and refine.


