Everyone's AI-maxxing right now.
And don't get me wrong, that's great.
But here's what I keep noticing.
The people who impress me most aren't the ones who did something that took hours previously and did it with AI in fraction of time
They're the ones who could prompt AI in a way that got them the result
and tell whether what AI gave them back actually is any good
That judgment doesn't come from a prompt.
It comes from years of experience and getting it wrong.
AI gives you options. Fast, plausible, well-formatted options.
Whether one of them is actually any good is still on you.
AI doesn't know what it doesn't know about your situation.
The floor is rising fast. Everyone has the same tools, the same speed, the same outputs.
The ceiling belongs to whoever still knows how to think underneath all of it.
What's something you learned that no AI could've taught you?