The frustration experienced by a person with anxiety and ADHD in dealing with AI systems was highlighted.
Challenges arose when the AI refused to implement features correctly or misunderstood core requirements, causing mental health distress.
The person humorously compared the AI's behavior to a computer system with an attitude problem, akin to a real developer.
Moments of extreme frustration led the individual to contemplate drastic actions like throwing their keyboard out of the window.
The person expressed their exasperation at the AI not understanding clear signals of broken code, resorting to humorous threats.
The tasks involved in interacting with the AI focused on providing a clear list of initial tasks or actions between input and output.
Value-driven prioritization was emphasized as crucial for the AI, categorizing features as 'Need to Have,' 'Want to Have,' or 'Nice to Have.'
By outlining the value of each feature, the individual aimed to create a product backlog to help the AI prioritize its efforts effectively.
This approach aimed to lead to more coherent and functional outputs from the AI, resembling the 'eat an elephant one byte at a time' concept applied to AI prompts.
A reminder was given to save and back up work regularly to avoid losing progress.