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Close reading of the corpus at each pipeline stage: raw → clean → relevant → coded.
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Agree breaking complex work into smaller steps improves control, accuracy, and overall quality of the final product, Leonard.
Most people want shortcuts, but good software still needs careful iteration.
This parallels what we see in surgery and rehabilitation. The outcome is rarely determined by one decision alone, but by consistent evaluation, adjustment, and attention to small details throughout the process.
AI helps move faster, but it does not replace careful thinking.
This post explains why good prompting alone is not enough anymore.
Haider A. The difference really is the thinking part.
Stefano M. Sinicropi, MD absolutely 100%. It’s the clinicians work that makes the real difference.
Shivendrika s. Ultimately there are no shortcuts in life.
The real skill today is learning how to guide AI without losing context.
The hard part was never typing code. It was always knowing what to build.
People expect magic from AI, but the real power comes from the workflow behind it.
Really like how you explained the importance of reviewing every output carefully.
Build, test, improve. That cycle never changes, even with AI tools.
just evolved process WOW
This is why experienced developers get better AI results than beginners.
Every strong AI workflow starts with structure and patience.
The craftsmanship shows up less in the prompt and more in how well you manage iteration, validation, and scope control across steps.
That is usually where the real skill difference emerges, not in model choice or prompt style.
There is a subtle assumption here that frustration comes from misunderstanding the tool, when often it comes from underestimating how much judgment is still required.
AI does not remove the hard parts, it compresses them into tighter cycles that demand more attention, not less.
This perfectly describes the difference between experimenting and actually building useful products.
This is exactly how real developers use AI. Small steps, testing, and constant refining.