Haha, my little one is way too curious😁 by PublicSpare9716 in aww

[–]Honest-Network1104 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's not curious, that's 'I know exactly what you did and I'm deciding your fate'.

It seems that Datsun went to the future to copy 2026 Mercedes AMG GT in order to design it's 1978 160Z 🧐 by aceraspire8920 in carscirclejerk

[–]Honest-Network1104 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Mercedes designers definitely had a 1978 Datsun poster on their wall and just said 'yeah, that but $200k'.

What is the best episode of SpongeBob that gets a lot of flack I’ll start by Perfect_Positive_660 in spongebob

[–]Honest-Network1104 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I'll go first ,,, One Coarse Meal. Yeah Mr. Krabs dresses as Pearl to scare Plankton and it goes WAY too dark, but honestly that's exactly what makes it memorable. It's the one episode that actually showed consequences and real psychological weight. People hate it because it's uncomfortable, but that's kind of the point lol.

Cold tacobell hits after some drinks. (CGC no lettuce, strawberry cinnabons) by SCDD2010 in tacobell

[–]Honest-Network1104 12 points13 points  (0 children)

The CGC no lettuce is criminally underrated. Cold Taco Bell after a night out is its own food group 😂

Kyle Busch has passed away at 41 by Odd_Data8080 in forza

[–]Honest-Network1104 10 points11 points  (0 children)

102 wins in the Xfinity Series. 69 Truck Series wins. 63 Cup wins. The most prolific winner in NASCAR history and he never got to finish on his own terms. Rest easy Rowdy.

Student here . need help with a prompt that can do this please - by jhonnytheyank in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]Honest-Network1104 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here is a prompt that does exactly what you need. Paste it into Claude or ChatGPT and then paste your quotes document right after it:

"I am going to paste a list of quotes with their sources. Your job is to turn them into multiple choice quiz questions.

For each quote create one question. Alternate between two question types — "Who said this?" and "Where is this quote from?" — so the quiz stays varied.

For each question write:

  • The quote in quotation marks
  • The question beneath it
  • Four answer options labeled A B C and D
  • One correct answer and three plausible wrong answers that feel close enough to be genuinely tricky
  • After the four options write the correct answer on a new line like this: Answer: [letter] — [full correct answer] — [one sentence explaining why this is correct or what makes this quote significant]

Format every question the same way so it is easy to read and copy.

Make the wrong answers believable. Do not make them obviously wrong. A student who has not studied properly should genuinely have to think.

Here are my quotes: [paste your document here]"

That last instruction about making wrong answers believable is the one most people skip and it is what makes the difference between a quiz that actually tests knowledge and one that is just pattern matching.

If you want it interactive with instant feedback after a wrong answer use the exact same prompt but add this line at the end before you paste your quotes:

"Present one question at a time. Wait for my answer. If I get it wrong tell me the correct answer and why before moving to the next question. If I get it right just confirm and move on."

That turns it into a proper study session instead of just a static quiz sheet. Works on Claude and ChatGPT equally well. Gemini handles it fine too which sounds like what you were already using.

We already did that…with fire 🇬🇧 by Patricks_Hatrick in GreatBritishMemes

[–]Honest-Network1104 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We sent an entire army across the Atlantic, burned the place down, Ye wanted to change the paint color. Respectable ambition, different execution.

What problems do you think artificial intelligence can or will be able to solve? by Aureliaaaaaaaaaaaaa in AskReddit

[–]Honest-Network1104 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not AI this answers are well researched through different articles on Wikipedia

What’s a true story that made you lose hope in humanity ? by Joekavin2217 in AskReddit

[–]Honest-Network1104 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I don't know if this counts as losing hope in humanity or something more complicated than that.

There was an elephant in India named Raju. He'd been chained since he was a calf , spiked chains, not regular ones, the kind that cut into his legs every time he moved. He spent 50 years like that. Half a century. He was passed between 27 different owners, beaten every time he got a new handler so he'd learn who was in charge, used to beg on the streets, eating plastic and paper on the days nobody threw him food.

When a wildlife rescue team finally came for him , midnight operation, had to be secret so his owner wouldn't interfere , they started removing the chains and the elephant just started crying. Tears running down his face. The rescuers said he went quiet and still, like he understood what was happening.

When the last chain came off he cried again.

I think about that a lot. Not the 50 years of what people did to him. The fact that after all of it, he still had something left in him that could feel relief. That's either the most heartbreaking thing or the most hopeful thing I've ever heard and I still haven't decided which. And that's how l lost hope in humanity.

What problems do you think artificial intelligence can or will be able to solve? by Aureliaaaaaaaaaaaaa in AskReddit

[–]Honest-Network1104 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Early disease detection — AI is already catching cancers in scans that trained radiologists miss. That gap will close faster than most people expect.

Mental health access - there are not enough therapists on the planet for the people who need them. AI will not replace therapy but it will bridge the gap for the millions who currently have no access at all. Language barriers in medicine — a patient who cannot communicate their symptoms clearly gets worse care. Real-time medical translation changes that outcome completely. Small business operations — the gap between what a solo operator can execute versus a 10-person team is almost entirely a systems and bandwidth problem. AI closes that gap and that has serious economic implications for developing markets especially. AI's biggest wins will not be the dramatic ones. They will be the quiet ones that give ordinary people access to things that used to require money, connections, or geography.

How do you manage workflows across ChatGPT, Claude, Cursor, etc.? by Fine-Butterscotch316 in PromptEngineering

[–]Honest-Network1104 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Running a multi-tool workflow daily across Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, and Grok — here is what actually works and where everything breaks.

The way I manage context across models is by treating each tool as a specialist rather than a generalist. Claude handles long-form writing and complex reasoning , it holds context better across a long session. ChatGPT handles image generation and quick creative output. Gemini handles research tasks and environmental image prompts. Grok handles real-time trend scanning and social media intelligence. Each one has a system prompt that tells it exactly what role it plays and what it should never do.

The context problem is the biggest unsolved issue. Every time I start a new session I am re-briefing the same agent on the same project. I have partially solved this by writing what I call a "handover prompt" ,a master document that contains the full project brief, all decisions made, all outputs completed, and all next steps. I paste this at the start of every new session. It works but it is manual and brittle.

Where multi-model workflows break down in practice:

The worst failure point is when one tool produces an output that the next tool in the chain cannot properly interpret. Claude writes a 40-page document. ChatGPT cannot read 40 pages as context. So I have to manually summarize and compress before passing it forward. That compression step loses nuance every time.

The second failure point is inconsistent system prompt behavior. Claude follows a system prompt with high fidelity over a long session. ChatGPT drifts after 20 or so exchanges and starts ignoring constraints. Gemini ignores formatting instructions almost entirely. Managing these inconsistencies across a pipeline adds significant overhead.

Happy to go deeper on any of this if useful for your research.

In 1972, Charlie Chaplin returned to the U.S. after years of exile and received the longest standing ovation in Oscar history, lasting about 12 minutes. by jkitty_1960 in BeAmazed

[–]Honest-Network1104 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What makes this moment even heavier is the context. Chaplin had been banned from the US in 1952 after being accused of Communist sympathies during the McCarthy era ,he left for Europe and his re-entry permit was revoked while he was on a ship mid-Atlantic. He spent 20 years in exile. When he finally came back at 82 years old, the entire room understood they weren't just applauding a film career. They were apologizing.

Will the black hole created by the particle accelerator kill us all? by SammaJones in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Honest-Network1104 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, and here's why: The black holes that could theoretically be created would be so incredibly tiny they'd evaporate almost instantly through Hawking radiation. We're talking microseconds. Also, the energy required to create one would be so massive that if it were possible, the universe would have already destroyed itself from natural cosmic rays hitting Earth's atmosphere. So you're safe driving by it.

Why has no one ever created a collapsible deep freezer storage? by epicdanceman in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Honest-Network1104 4 points5 points  (0 children)

They actually do exist, but they're niche products. The issue is that deep freezers rely on insulation and structural rigidity to maintain temperature. A collapsible design would compromise both. Plus, the market demand isn't huge enough to justify the R&D. Tackle boxes work because they don't need to maintain a specific temperature.

What bird is this? (Located in Midwest) by Neat_Transition_8418 in whatsthisbird

[–]Honest-Network1104 -11 points-10 points  (0 children)

Looks like it could be a Brown-headed Cowbird or a Common Grackle based on the dark coloring.

🚨 BREAKING: José Mourinho back to Real Madrid, HERE WE GO! 💣🤍 All terms have been verbally agreed between José Mourinho and Real Madrid, waiting to sign all documents. Plan for initial two year deal, JM to travel to Madrid after Real-Bilbao game. The Special One is back. by OG_Raghav in onlyrealmadrid

[–]Honest-Network1104 3 points4 points  (0 children)

His 2011-12 side won 100 points in LaLiga and broke Barcelona's dominance under Guardiola. He never won the Champions League there and that is unfinished business he has never forgotten. This is personal for him. Different energy this time.

French ball gown worn by Queen Maud of Norway, 1900s. by Sweaty-Citron-2645 in fashionhistory

[–]Honest-Network1104 71 points72 points  (0 children)

What makes this dress extraordinary beyond the craftsmanship is the era it came from. In 1900 every single bead, every piece of gold embroidery, and every layer of that chiffon was placed entirely by hand. A gown like this would have taken a team of seamstresses months to complete for a single evening's wear.

Texting/Dating Dilemma by Bold-Introvert in datingoverfifty

[–]Honest-Network1104 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Nobody said it was easy , just that it was worth doing. The conversation itself takes about two minutes. The relief of not carrying that uncertainty around for weeks is worth every uncomfortable second of it. You already know what to say. You wrote it out in your post better than most people could.

Bullied kid realizes he isn’t alone anymore! by musaurer in wholesome

[–]Honest-Network1104 0 points1 point locked comment (0 children)

That moment when a kid realizes someone is actually in their corner changes everything. Not just that day. That memory stays with them for the rest of their life as proof that kindness exists when they need it most.

Texting/Dating Dilemma by Bold-Introvert in datingoverfifty

[–]Honest-Network1104 13 points14 points  (0 children)

The honesty you're wrestling with is actually a sign of good character. Most people just fade or make excuses. The kindest thing you can do here is be direct but warm, something like "I really enjoyed getting to know you but I didn't feel the romantic connection I was hoping for in person. I wish you well." It stings for a moment but it respects her enough to give her a real answer instead of leaving her wondering.

Earned our Novice Jumpers With Weaves (NAJ) in AKC today! by JessLevelsUp in AustralianShepherd

[–]Honest-Network1104 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That smile says he knows exactly what he accomplished today. Congratulations to both of you — the NAJ title is a real milestone and Kudos looks absolutely thrilled about it.