How AI surfaces, prompts, and workflows shape the way people think.
Ideas that make machine intelligence feel readable, usable, and human.
Bays Wong writes about AI from the point of view of someone who cares about clarity: the shape of tools, the ethics of systems, and the small decisions that make software feel trustworthy.
Each post uses a compact structure: one idea, one example, one next move.
Notes on building with AI that stay grounded in everyday product decisions.
Editing, structure, and the craft of making complex ideas feel legible.
Thoughtful speculation about what changes when software can reason and respond.
Recent entries that reward a full read, not just a glance.
Each article is built to stand on its own, with a distinct angle, a strong opening, and a closing thought worth carrying into the rest of the week.
Why AI products need slower, clearer copy
When a product asks for trust, language has to do more than announce capability; it has to explain intent, boundaries, and benefit.
Open in BlogA better prompt pattern for everyday tasks
A small structural change can make AI assistance feel less magical and more dependable: context first, action second, review last.
Read the noteWhat we actually mean by “useful” AI
The most durable AI experiences are not the loudest. They reduce friction, increase understanding, and fit the day people already have.
See the articleA blog that treats AI as a craft, not a spectacle.
Instead of chasing trend cycles, this site gives attention to the part that lasts: how AI tools are introduced, how they are understood, and how their language shapes adoption.
Good writing makes technology feel less alien. It invites people to think, test, and decide with confidence.
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No noise, no schedule theater. Just new writing when there is something worth sharing.