So Long “Prompt Engineering,” We Hardly Knew Ya

<p>Prompt engineering.</p> <p>We see the term everywhere.</p> <p>It&rsquo;s&nbsp;<strong>the</strong>&nbsp;hot topic, the new darling of the AI world.</p> <p>The World Economic Forum, Open AI&rsquo;s Sam Altman, and the Twitterverse can&rsquo;t stop talking about it.</p> <p>I get at least two dozen ads in my feeds trying to sell me courses in the &ldquo;next big thing&rdquo; and make $500,000 a year with ease. No experience necessary.</p> <p>Yeah, that&rsquo;s how life works.</p> <p>But the uncomfortable truth is:&nbsp;<em>Prompt Engineering</em>&nbsp;is facing a cruel sunset.</p> <p>Why?</p> <p>How could this just-discovered, highly lucrative gig be going away so soon?</p> <p>Three big reasons.</p> <p><em>One:</em><br /> <strong>AI is getting smarter.</strong></p> <p>Fast. Really fast.</p> <p>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&rsquo;t have to spell out what we want as clearly.</p> <p>The need for finely tuned prompts is decreasing. The machines will develop their own prompts by just asking a question.</p> <p><a href="https://wizwow.medium.com/so-long-prompt-engineering-we-hardly-knew-ya-a77d871e00e9"><strong>Visit Now</strong></a></p>