logo
I've been using ChatGPT since it launched — this is the one prompt that never fails me

I've been using ChatGPT since it launched — this is the one prompt that never fails me

Tom's Guide13-05-2025
AI can do some incredible things. It can code entire websites, run complicated security programs and help discover entirely new drugs. However, day to day, where AI is most useful is in the most basic of uses.
Take ChatGPT, for example. I, and many other people, use ChatGPT every single day. It's a tool that can help you in so many ways. But there is one particular prompt that I use the AI chatbot for more than anything else.
Our AI writer, Amanda Caswell, listed something similar as one of her top five prompts for AI chatbots, and I couldn't agree more.
Since AI chatbots first appeared, I've been asking them to 'explain it to me like I'm a child.' This simple prompt has helped me understand complicated scientific concepts, tariffs, and, to be perfectly honest with you, concepts that I probably should understand.
By asking ChatGPT a prompt along this line, the model will quickly condense any concept into a manageable explanation, usually complete with metaphors or visual explanations to help you out.
For example, if I ask ChatGPT to explain black holes to me like I'm five, this is what I get back:
'Imagine a black hole like a big invisible vacuum cleaner in space.
Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips.
So if you get too close, you get sucked in and can't get out, just like toys getting sucked into a vacuum. That's why it's called a black hole — because it doesn't let any light out, so we can't see it.
But don't worry — they're very far away and can't hurt us!'
Sure, it's a bit condescending, but it explains an arguably complicated subject in a short period in very understandable language.
This kind of prompt was incredibly popular in the early days of AI chatbots, but these models have come a long way since then. Because of this, you don't necessarily need to be as simple in your prompt to get this kind of answer.
For example, instead of asking it to treat you like a child, you can simply explain your level of understanding on a given topic. When asked, 'explain black holes to an adult who has no understanding of science at all', this is what ChatGPT responded with.
One of the things I like about this kind of prompt is how much it makes use of the conversational nature of ChatGPT. Set out your level of understanding on a topic, and you'll get an explanation at your level.
If it still doesn't make sense, ask for it to be simplified further, ask for a metaphor to explain it, or even a visual explanation of the concept.
Equally, if ChatGPT has dumbed things down a little bit too far, ask for a clearer, more advanced explanation. Or if you're adopting the aging system, up your level. 'Explain this concept like I'm a University student,' or if you're feeling really confident, try something like 'explain this concept like I am an expert in this subject and we're discussing it together.'
Be warned, when I tried this on the black hole topic, this was what I was met with:
Lost? So am I!
It might feel a little bit ridiculous to simplify your knowledge base to that of a child but I love this feature. Over the years, ChatGPT has oversimplified topics to me on a daily basis, with us having a back-and-forth conversation until I understand a subject fully.
So often I have found myself having to work backwards with subjects until I understand them. This is just starting the opposite way!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Companies have invested billions into AI, 95 percent getting zero return
Companies have invested billions into AI, 95 percent getting zero return

The Hill

time5 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Companies have invested billions into AI, 95 percent getting zero return

Although there has been between $30 and $40 billion in enterprise investment into generative AI, a recent MIT report shows that 95 percent of organizations are seeing zero return. Just 5 percent of integrated artificial intelligence pilots 'are extracting millions in value,' while the majority contribute no measurable impact to profits, the report found. Many companies are implementing tools like OpenAI's ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot, with over 80 percent having explored or piloted these technologies, and nearly 40 percent reporting their deployment. However, these tools primarily function to enhance individual productivity rather than contribute to overall company earnings. Most times, AI integration fails to contribute to profits 'due to brittle workflows, lack of contextual learning, and misalignment with day-to-day operations,' the MIT report reads. The AI systems are unable to learn and think in ways humans can, as 'most GenAI systems do not retain feedback, adapt to context, or improve over time,' it continued. The research also suggests that generative AI implementation is unlikely to result in widespread job loss, at least for the next few years. 'Until AI systems achieve contextual adaptation and autonomous operation, organizational impact will manifest through external cost optimization rather than internal restructuring,' the report concluded.

The Return Of The Idea Guy: Why Visionaries Will Rule The AI Age
The Return Of The Idea Guy: Why Visionaries Will Rule The AI Age

Forbes

time23 minutes ago

  • Forbes

The Return Of The Idea Guy: Why Visionaries Will Rule The AI Age

Jehan Hamedi, Founder of Vizit, invented Visual Intelligence—AI's new way of seeing the world. For years, the 'Idea Guy' has been the punchline of every startup joke. You know the one: full of big ideas, but no technical chops to build them. The dreamer who says, 'I have this billion-dollar idea,' only to be met with a smirk and a well-worn meme: 'Ideas are worthless. Execution is everything.' But here's the plot twist no one saw coming: In the Age of AI, the idea guy is back—and this time, they're unstoppable. We are entering a new era—an idea-driven era—where building the product is no longer the bottleneck. The bottleneck is knowing what to build. AI has collapsed the gap between imagination and execution. And in that collapse, the pendulum swings back to those who can imagine boldly, synthesize creatively and dream up things the rest of us didn't even know we needed. From Execution To Imagination For decades, value creation favored the executors: the builders, the coders, the operators. Vision had its place, but traction was king. You had to grind. Ship. Scale. Optimize. Raise. Repeat. But now? You can whisper a product idea to ChatGPT and have a working prototype by dinner. You can generate a viral marketing campaign, launch a website, spin up 100 landing pages or analyze user feedback—all in hours, not months. That doesn't make execution irrelevant. It makes vision exponentially more valuable. The scarcest resource is no longer engineering. It's taste, insight and narrative power. Why The Idea Guy Wins 1. AI supercharges creativity. If you're a visionary thinker, AI is your dream team. Sketches become storyboards. Thoughts become scripts. Mockups become real products. You don't need to code or design—you just need to think clearly and direct wisely. 2. Speed rewards synthesis. AI doesn't innovate on its own—it accelerates ideas that are already available. The person who connects the dots fastest wins. The best ideas now emerge from remixing, reframing and recontextualizing. 3. Narrative drives adoption. When anyone can build, why you build becomes the differentiator. The idea guy doesn't just make a product—they create a story, a mission, a meme, a movement. And in the infinite scroll of the internet, what catches attention is what spreads. 4. Taste is the new moat. When everything can be built, what you choose to build matters more than how you build it. Curation beats creation. Taste becomes strategy. Those with an instinct for what feels inevitable, resonant and viral will lead—before the first line of code is written. The Rise Of The Creative CEO Steve Jobs once said, 'It's not the tools that matter. It's what you do with them.' He was the prototypical idea guy—before the world was ready for him. Now, the world is ready. In the next decade, the most influential CEOs won't be the ones writing algorithms. They'll be the ones imagining the most compelling future and wielding AI to manifest it at lightning speed. They'll build billion-dollar companies from browser windows. They'll lead tiny teams that challenge giants. And they'll do it by conjuring, not coding. We're entering the age of the creator-founder. The vision-operator. The idea guy with God mode. So What Happens Next? If you've ever been told you're "just the idea guy,' it's time to flip the script. Refine your taste. Sharpen your worldview. Learn to orchestrate. Use AI not as a crutch—but as a conductor's baton. Because in the AI Age, code is cheap. Labor is instant. Scale is native. But ideas—ideas that spark belief, shape culture and open new markets? They're rare. They're valuable. And the people who have them—really have them—will rule the world. Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?

OpenAI engineer's advice to high school students? 'Absolutely learn to code'
OpenAI engineer's advice to high school students? 'Absolutely learn to code'

Business Insider

time2 hours ago

  • Business Insider

OpenAI engineer's advice to high school students? 'Absolutely learn to code'

Szymon Sidor recently sounded off on why, even in a world with ChatGPT, Cursor, and other AI tools, it's still good for current high school students to learn basic coding. "You should absolutely learn to code," Sidor said during episode of the company's podcast from August. "One skill that is at a premium and will continue to be at a premium is having really structured intellect that can break down complicated problems into pieces." Sidor, who has worked at OpenAI for over eight years, said programming is a great way to learn such a skill. Andrew Mayne, who hosts the podcast and previously served as OpenAI's chief science communicator, questioned the notion that people would downplay learning to code simply because AI tools can do it for you. "Whenever I hear people say, 'Don't learn to code,' it's like, do I want an airplane pilot who doesn't understand aerodynamics? This doesn't make much sense to me," Mayne said. Their views echo some other top voices in the industry, including GitHub CEO Thomas Dohmke. Dohmke said in April that coding should be taught as a core subject. AI's coding abilities continue to advance. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg told Joe Rogan earlier this year that the company's AI would soon be able to write code that matches the output of a mid-level engineer. "The obvious tactical thing is just get really good at using AI tools. Like when I was graduating as a senior from high school, the obvious tactical thing was get really good at coding," Altman told Stratechery in March. "And this is the new version of that."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store