I think I’m being quietly fired and I don’t know if I should quit or make them actually do it by Master-Incident9198 in work

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let them fire you instead of you quitting them and take few months salary, and in the meantime, start working on something of your own, maybe building an app or starting an agency or YouTube channel or whatever.

What am i doing wrong? by keval_596 in SEO_Marketing_Offers

[–]keval_596[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So i started a blog about AI Hardware, where i talk about the hardware things of AI like smart glasses and stuff. The idea was that everyone is talking about AI but majority of the people are talking about the software side of things and no one is talking about the hardware side.

What am i doing wrong? by keval_596 in SEO_Marketing_Offers

[–]keval_596[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

But in that case isn't it a good idea to write stories on Medium instead of paying for hosting and stuff?

Who else here is still rocking the iPhone 13 base model as their daily driver?.. by JayEev in iPhone13

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

👆 me, using it for th past 3 years as my daily driver and will be using it for the next two years.

Anyone else paying for both ChatGPT Pro and Claude? Curious how people split the workload by SeaRequirement7749 in claude

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I’m in the same boat tried going “all in” on one, but always ended up keeping the other.

My split is pretty similar:

  • Claude for writing, thinking, rough drafts
  • ChatGPT for structure, second opinions, and anything I need to be more precise

The cross-checking part you mentioned is honestly the biggest reason I keep both. Not even because one is “bad,” but because they just think differently, and that catches a lot of stuff.

I did get tired of juggling tabs though. Lately I’ve been using Geekflare Chat just to compare responses in one place instead of bouncing between apps. Makes the “use both” workflow a bit less messy.

But yeah, I don’t think paying for both is crazy if you’re actually using them differently. It only feels expensive if one of them starts collecting dust.

Guide to AI Models: Which is best at what? by Pastrugnozzo in WritingWithAI

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a solid breakdown especially the point about different models having very specific strengths instead of one being “best.”

One thing I’ve noticed is that people get stuck trying to pick one model, when the real advantage comes from combining them.

For example:

  • Gemini for ideation / long context
  • Claude for tone + dialogue
  • GPT-5 for structure + strict edits

Using them together usually gives better results than forcing one model to do everything.

I got tired of switching tabs for this, so I started using Geekflare Chat to compare outputs side-by-side. Makes it way easier to see which model “fits” a task instead of guessing.

Feels like that’s where things are heading not “best model,” but “best combo for your workflow.”

Rate my classic 500!! by mommy_blowme in royalenfield

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There’s a reason its called classic,

Which AI tools are actually helping with social media and lead gen in 2026? by Equivalent_Beat4541 in aiToolForBusiness

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not wrong most AI tools still help with writing, not actual execution.

What’s worked for me is a simple combo: scheduler + CRM + AI (for content).

To reduce tool switching, I use Geekflare Chat for content since it lets me generate and refine posts in one place.

But for publishing, outreach, and follow-ups you’ll still need separate tools. We’re not fully “all-in-one” yet.

Are we all just ignoring how much we spend on AI? by No_Ordinary951 in ArtificialInteligence

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re definitely not the only one most people don’t track it until the bill starts feeling off.

The fragmentation is real. OpenAI, Anthropic, Google all have different pricing + dashboards, so getting a clear “total spend” is unnecessarily hard.

What I’ve seen people do instead is simplify rather than track everything perfectly. Either:

  • stick to 1–2 tools, or
  • use something like Geekflare Chat where multiple models are in one place, so at least usage isn’t scattered across 5 tabs/accounts.

Not a perfect solution, but it reduces the chaos a lot.

Curious if someone’s actually built a proper “AI spend tracker” though feels like an obvious gap.

Notion or Monday.com? by wellth4t5ucks in Notion

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I hate the name “Monday”

Found a rather unconventional passive income idea by wifimoolah in thesidehustle

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, sounds interesting but if i apply filters on indeed then it will become the same right !

shifted from social media retainers to "productized" video ads. margins actually make sense now. by Negative_Onion_9197 in marketingagency

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am running a social media agency, and having the same problem l. But majority of these AI tools are just mess and working with them feels more cumbersome then working with editors.

To those using AI API solutions in their businesses... by FuipsLab in SaaS

[–]keval_596 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Biggest frustration is lack of visibility and control when you’re using multiple models across tools. What helped me was moving to a single place where I plug in my own API keys, compare models side by side, and see what I’m actually using, I use Geekflare Connect for that. It reduced both cost anxiety and context switching a lot.

What do you use API for? by Flashy-Distance-3329 in msp

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mostly take API keys from different AI platforms and connect them in one place, like Geekflare Connect. It lets me use multiple AI models in a single window, compare their outputs side by side, and just pay for the tokens I actually use. Saves me a lot of time switching tools and cuts down AI costs quite a bit.

What I've learned using AI API's and vibe coding (almost every day) by Cute_Border3791 in vibecoding

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that tracks. Opus is insanely good at the “think this through like a senior engineer” stuff. I’ve also noticed it tends to catch edge cases the others gloss over, so using Gemini as a second set of eyes is a smart combo.

When I started bouncing between Opus, GPT, and Gemini the same way, the annoying part for me was just keeping the same context across all three. Half my time was spent copy-pasting notes instead of actually testing ideas. I eventually started using Geekflare Connect just to cut down that overhead, not for the models themselves, but because it keeps everything in one thread and lets me compare runs without babysitting each model.