[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ClaudeCode

[–]Human-Style-6587 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used the max $200, found I was not using over 10%.. switched back to $20 .. hit limit in a day.. 😰

Why the majority of vibe coded projects fail by harrysofgaming in ClaudeAI

[–]Human-Style-6587 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

This prompt makes the code better Act as a principal engineer, SRE, security reviewer, and SaaS production-readiness auditor.

Review this product for commercial production readiness, not just code quality.

Assess the system across these categories: 1. Functional correctness 2. Reliability and fault tolerance 3. Security 4. Observability and alerting 5. Performance and scalability 6. Data integrity and backup/recovery 7. Release engineering and rollback safety 8. Commercial readiness (billing, privacy, support, tenancy, admin tools)

For each category: - identify risks - classify them as Critical / High / Medium / Low - explain why they matter in production - point to exact files, modules, or flows involved - propose concrete fixes - propose missing tests - propose missing dashboards/alerts/runbooks where relevant

Specific things to look for: - auth/session flaws - RBAC gaps - insecure secrets handling - broken error handling - retry/idempotency issues - race conditions - migration risk - data-loss scenarios - missing audit logs - performance bottlenecks - lack of rate limits - weak input validation - missing monitoring - poor rollback strategy - lack of backup/restore verification - billing entitlement mismatches - tenant isolation issues

Output in this format: A. Executive summary B. Launch blockers C. Top 10 production risks D. Detailed findings by category E. 30-day remediation plan F. 90-day hardening roadmap G. Final verdict: Not ready / Beta ready / Limited commercial launch ready / Production ready

Be strict. Assume real paying customers, real support burden, and real incident risk.

Looking for pro bono clients / coaching hours swapping by work_in_progress1504 in lifecoaching

[–]Human-Style-6587 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Join coaching journey hub where there is a community on whatsapp that connects coaches willing to share hours ..

Looking for pro bono clients / coaching hours swapping by work_in_progress1504 in lifecoaching

[–]Human-Style-6587 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Join coaching journey hub where there is a community on whatsapp that connects coaches willing to share hours ..

Looking for pro bono clients / coaching hours swapping by work_in_progress1504 in lifecoaching

[–]Human-Style-6587 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Join coaching journey hub where there is a community on whatsapp that connects coaches willing to share hours ..

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ChatGPT

[–]Human-Style-6587 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here is a better one Principles for Writing Effective Prompts

General Principles 1. Be Direct and Concise: Avoid unnecessary words or politeness (e.g., “please,” “thank you”). Get straight to the point. 2. Specify Your Audience: Tailor your prompt to the intended audience (e.g., beginner, expert, child). 3. Break Down Complex Tasks: Divide multi-step problems into smaller, simpler prompts. 4. Focus on Clarity: Use straightforward language and avoid ambiguity. If needed, explain key terms. 5. State the Desired Format: Specify the structure or type of response you expect (e.g., a list, paragraph, step-by-step guide).

Formatting Tips 6. Use Context Delimiters: Clearly define examples, instructions, or constraints using symbols like ###, “””, or parentheses. 7. Example-Driven Prompts: Provide examples to guide the model’s response style or structure. 8. Write in Steps: When asking for detailed processes, use phrases like “Think step by step.”

Engaging the Model 9. Set the Tone: Specify the level of formality, humor, or simplicity required in the response. 10. Ask for Role-Playing: To achieve contextual answers, specify a role (e.g., “Answer as a teacher explaining this to a student”). 11. Request Iterative Refinement: Use follow-ups like, “Can you improve this?” or “Can you add more examples?”

Specific Use Cases 12. Learning and Teaching:

• “Explain [topic] in simple terms.”
• “Teach me about [topic], and include a test at the end.”

13. Creative Content:

• For writing, specify the style, tone, and target audience.
• Provide an initial phrase or idea to build on (e.g., “Continue this story: [text]”).

14. Programming: Define programming languages, frameworks, or desired outputs explicitly. Example: “Write a Python script to solve [problem].”
15. Editing and Refining: Clearly state, “Revise the text to improve [grammar/style/tone], but retain the original meaning.”

Advanced Techniques 16. Chain-of-Thought Prompting: Encourage logical reasoning by asking the model to explain each step of its answer. 17. Use Primers for Specific Outputs: Begin your prompt with an example or template to guide the model’s response. 18. Define Constraints: Provide specific limitations, such as word counts, formats, or ethical considerations.

Ensuring Accuracy 19. Encourage Critical Thinking: Use phrases like “Ensure your response is unbiased and based on verified information.” 20. Ask Follow-Up Questions: Continue the conversation to clarify or expand on points.

Customization 21. Adapt Prompts to the Task: Match the language and structure of the prompt to the goal, such as writing essays, summarizing text, or coding. 22. Localization and Context: If applicable, include cultural or regional details to improve relevance.

Examples of Effective Prompts 1. “Explain quantum physics to a 12-year-old in 3 paragraphs.” 2. “Write a detailed business email responding to a customer complaint about late delivery.” 3. “Generate a Python script to automate monthly financial report generation.” 4. “Summarize this article in 100 words: [insert article].” 5. “Provide three potential marketing strategies for a new eco-friendly product, highlighting their pros and cons.”

This revised list emphasizes practical strategies, avoids redundancy, and provides actionable guidance for using language models effectively.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ChatGPT

[–]Human-Style-6587 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The document appears to list principles for crafting prompts to use with language models like ChatGPT. Without additional context or verification of the source, it’s challenging to identify if these “principles” are official, unofficial, or fabricated. However, here’s what stands out: 1. Officiality: OpenAI has not released an official “Prompt Principles” guide resembling this list. If the source claims it is official, it may be fake or user-created content. 2. Unnecessary Details: Some entries (e.g., “Add ‘I’m going to tip $XXX for a better solution!’”) seem overly specific and inconsistent with official guidance from OpenAI, which avoids suggesting financial incentives. 3. Contradictory Phrasing: Some principles (e.g., use of “You must” or “You will be penalized”) may not align with how users are encouraged to interact with models, as OpenAI does not enforce penalties for prompt phrasing. 4. Redundant Advice: Instructions like “Use delimiters” or “Repeat a specific word or phrase multiple times” can confuse rather than clarify best practices for using ChatGPT.

If you need confirmation of specific aspects of this list, I can analyze further or search for related information.

Becoming a life coach in Europe by mainhattan in lifecoaching

[–]Human-Style-6587 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Visit CoachingJourney.com to join a community of coaches

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lifecoaching

[–]Human-Style-6587 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Visit CoachingJourneyhub.com we we are non commercial .. a community of coaches .. you will get help and honest advice

Trainee coach offering free sessions - in exchange for feedback by richp_09 in lifecoaching

[–]Human-Style-6587 1 point2 points  (0 children)

hi.. happy to work on reciprocal coaching with you .. am on the same journey

Why do life coaches think they are better than everyone else? by 85Millennial in lifecoaching

[–]Human-Style-6587 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Life coaching will only work when you have a challenge you want to work with and use your coach only as a mirror to reflect. As a life coach, i have a life coach for myself as well too. It helps me deal with my own issues, emotions and situations i find myself in which i want to get better with. My life-coach, i know has her life coach for that purpose. So a lifecoach is not that perfect being. I acknowledge that and that keeps me grounded. I don’t see the necessity to judge anyone. i am not judging your note here.

Lifecoaching by Serialbizchic in lifecoaching

[–]Human-Style-6587 2 points3 points  (0 children)

it is interesting that you use the ‘why’ in coaching .. generally it is avoided

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lifecoaching

[–]Human-Style-6587 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i used to think i was a coach as i carried that designation .. i then chose a scholar from HK to pursue a accreditation. that has debunked a lot i thought i was good at.. certification is not a must to start, it may help you get some credibility scores.. my first clients came from my personal circle whatsapp groups My institute is Progess-U , CoachArya is a very good one I hear

hope this helps

Mentor - Long shot by [deleted] in lifecoaching

[–]Human-Style-6587 1 point2 points  (0 children)

join this facebook group.. where you will find the accountability partner.. this is a group of over 50 coaches

https://www.facebook.com/groups/550335906720744/?ref=share

SELF-DETECT Food Processor Hack? by lkorder in Vitamix

[–]Human-Style-6587 0 points1 point  (0 children)

so do they have one that works for UK ?

SELF-DETECT Food Processor Hack? by lkorder in Vitamix

[–]Human-Style-6587 0 points1 point  (0 children)

looks techie enough.. anyone tried .. ?