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Close reading of the corpus at each pipeline stage: raw → clean → relevant → coded.
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The Day 1 advice to "Do one real work task" is the most important part. A tutorial shows what is possible. A real task shows what is practical and where you need to provide better context to get a useful result.
Honestly, Day 3 is where the real magic happens. Banning words like "delve" or "leverage" is an absolute must-do..
It’s crazy how fast Claude’s tone changes from sounding like an over-enthusiastic corporate robot to a normal, functioning human once you give it a strict list of what not to say.
Saved this for my next cleanup day, Ruben Hassid!
Most people waste time learning AI tools instead of using AI to create something valuable.
You are absolutely right. Tutorials are just feed-forward without any feedback loop. Real engineering requires closed-loop pipelines: you need to run your code/agent, watch it fail in production (or in simulation), and analyze the signal integrity of the failure. Anyone who spends 3 hours watching without 'breaking' anything along the way gets a zero-entropy gain in their performance capabilities.
Decent onboarding arc, and Projects, connectors, and custom style files are all real, useful features. Just flag that "Adaptive Thinking" as a toggle, scheduled tasks, and some skills blend native features with the author's own naming and landing pages. The general flow is fine, but verify the actual steps and feature names against docs.claude.com rather than the third-party links.
Teaching AI your decision patterns usually creates better outputs than endlessly optimizing prompts every single session.
Mohammed Mirza
Great job
Very necessary for beginners to have this
The plug it in bit…I work with lots of clients who understandly aren’t comfortable connecting their email and Drive to an LLM. Not yet anyway. I wish more was written about what this actually means and how to safeguard privacy and client confidentiality (something on my list)
That's the process, using the AI tools in a practical way, not just experimenting or a chatting tools. Thanks for sharing good content always Ruben Hassid
Amazing breakdown, bro. That's how we start.And that's exactly how I started using Claude, and now I think I am very good at Claude. Ruben Hassid
True, with one asterisk: works great if your language is supported. Croatian still gets mangled by native transcription
This is a practical blueprint for moving from experimentation to real execution.