Prompt engineering.
We see the term everywhere.
It’s the hot topic, the new darling of the AI world.
The World Economic Forum, Open AI’s Sam Altman, and the Twitterverse can’t stop talking about it.
I get at least two dozen ads in my feeds trying to sell me courses in the “next big thing” and make $500,000 a year with ease. No experience necessary.
Yeah, that’s how life works.
But the uncomfortable truth is: Prompt Engineering is facing a cruel sunset.
Why?
How could this just-discovered, highly lucrative gig be going away so soon?
Three big reasons.
One:
AI is getting smarter.
Fast. Really fast.
The machines are beginning to grasp our words, our phrases, just like you and I do. It is like a child that is learning to talk, and we don’t have to spell out what we want as clearly.
The need for finely tuned prompts is decreasing. The machines will develop their own prompts by just asking a question.