Great description of what is a more efficient workflow. I still toggle between Claude code, Claude and Word. Claude code and Claude don’t always agree. I make them bounce ideas off of each other. In that back and forth, I get clarity.
Have you ever thought about incorporating a second LLM into your workflow?
Really interesting. One line stood out to me as it captures something I've been ruminating on: all of these AI tools are pushing people to think like technologists/developers. Meaning, take their current (creative) processes and systemize them. I wonder if this shift is real and what impact it will have. The line in question is this - how many writers are actually familiar with developer tools?
But if you write regularly—articles, documentation, books—and you’re already comfortable with developer tools, this is worth investigating.
I have Google workspaces for my business which lets you use the pro version of Gemini which is integrated into all of their tools (docs, sheets, etc). Because it's a workspaces business account, their licensing keeps Gemini from using your data in their learning models. It's actually a pretty seamless solution for those who struggle with technology.
Great description of what is a more efficient workflow. I still toggle between Claude code, Claude and Word. Claude code and Claude don’t always agree. I make them bounce ideas off of each other. In that back and forth, I get clarity.
Have you ever thought about incorporating a second LLM into your workflow?
Just curious.
I do have one. Claude Code calls my “outside editor” (gpt) for a final review once I’m done writing.
Really interesting. One line stood out to me as it captures something I've been ruminating on: all of these AI tools are pushing people to think like technologists/developers. Meaning, take their current (creative) processes and systemize them. I wonder if this shift is real and what impact it will have. The line in question is this - how many writers are actually familiar with developer tools?
But if you write regularly—articles, documentation, books—and you’re already comfortable with developer tools, this is worth investigating.
I have Google workspaces for my business which lets you use the pro version of Gemini which is integrated into all of their tools (docs, sheets, etc). Because it's a workspaces business account, their licensing keeps Gemini from using your data in their learning models. It's actually a pretty seamless solution for those who struggle with technology.