AI for Breakfast

Chris Witham • January 22, 2024

Post 5 – It's all about the prompts…


I changed the brief half way through to be more more typographical and as usual ChatGPT really doesn't do words very well at all! I've also added a fourth on this occasion to highlight the errors! To be fair my prompts are not very detailed, I'll experiment with the prompting to try and get better results.

AI for Breakfast - Prompt Engineering

Me: Please create me a photographic image in landscape format of the idiom A picture is worth 1000 words.


ChatGPT: Here's a landscape format image representing the idiom "A picture is worth a thousand words". It features a camera with a collage of various scenes emerging from it, surrounded by words in different fonts and languages. This composition aims to visually capture the essence of the idiom. What do you think, Chris?

AI for Breakfast - Prompt Engineering

Me: Not a fan, could you try something else.


ChatGPT: Here's another interpretation of the idiom "A picture is worth a thousand words," featuring an old-fashioned typewriter and a vivid landscape painting. The contrast between the black and white typewriter and the colorful imagery symbolizes the power of visual storytelling. I hope this resonates more with your vision, Chris.

AI for Breakfast - Prompt Engineering

Me: Could you try one more that is more typographical.


ChatGPT: Here's a typographical interpretation of "A picture is worth a thousand words". It's designed with various fonts and styles, each representing different artistic and cultural themes, some adorned with miniature illustrations. The vibrant colors and intricate typography aim to reflect the diversity and richness of visual storytelling. Let me know your thoughts on this one, Chris.

AI for Breakfast - Prompt Engineering

Me: The spelling is way off?


ChatGPT: I apologize for the oversight. The image generation process sometimes struggles with accurately depicting specific text or spelling. Let's give it another try with a clearer emphasis on correct spelling and a strong typographical focus. I'll create a new image for you.


I've created another typographical image, this time with a stronger focus on correct spelling. The phrase "A picture is worth a thousand words" is depicted in various artistic fonts, each character uniquely designed. I hope this version aligns better with your expectations. Let me know your thoughts!


As you can see there’s room for improvement to say the least! I’ve signed up for 3 courses on Prompt Engineering with Udemy, hopefully my skills will improve.


For a comparison I just tried the same prompt in Adobe Firefly and in ChatGPTs defence the results are also pretty poor when it comes to words!

Adobe Firefly AI image generation
By Chris Witham February 20, 2026
Not every week ends with a certificate. This one did.
Lines of colorful computer code on a dark background.
By Chris Witham December 11, 2025
Where AI really helps your Business If you spend any time on LinkedIn or X, you’ll have seen bold claims about how AI can help you build software in a matter of days. There’s a lot of excitement, a lot of big promises, and a fair bit of confusion for business owners trying to work out what’s real. A new term doing the rounds is “Vibe Coding” —the idea of describing what you want to an AI assistant and having it generate the code for you. It’s becoming popular because it can move things forward quickly and help people explore ideas they wouldn’t have been able to create alone. And the truth is, it does have its place. The challenge isn’t the technique. It’s the expectation that AI will automatically deliver finished, reliable, production-ready tools without any real design or thinking behind them. AI accelerates the work you already do well Used properly, AI can: • Remove huge amounts of repetitive work • Speed up drafting and iteration • Generate working prototypes in hours • Help non-technical people explore ideas • Improve documentation, planning and communication This is where it shines. But it still needs clarity, structure, and well-designed processes around it. It’s like having a very fast assistant rather than a fully formed development team. Why many AI projects don’t deliver what people expect Independent research this year showed a clear pattern: • Many early AI initiatives failed to produce measurable business value • Companies abandoned AI ideas because they couldn’t scale or integrate them • The gap between an impressive demo and a reliable tool is larger than people thought This doesn’t mean AI is overhyped. It means teams jumped straight to execution without the groundwork. The technology isn’t the issue. It’s the approach. Small businesses don’t need Enterprise Platforms Most UK small businesses don’t need to build a full software product. What they actually need is: • Better workflows • Faster content generation • Clearer communication • Improved customer support • Tools that reflect the way they work • Consistency and repeatability AI is perfect for this. A custom GPT trained on your tone, your documents and your processes can become: • A writing assistant • A customer support helper • A knowledge base navigator • An internal guide for staff • A quality-control layer • A process automator No engineering team needed. No complex infrastructure. No stress. Where AI builds real value right now AI works best when it’s part of a thoughtful, guided approach: • Define the outcome you want • Build a lightweight prototype (AI helps here) • Add structure, rules and guardrails • Connect it to your real workflow • Test it with real users or staff • Iterate until it feels natural You can still move fast. You just avoid building something brittle that breaks the moment it’s needed. The key insight: AI doesn’t replace expertise, it amplifies it AI is at its strongest when someone knowledgeable decides: • What it should do • What it shouldn’t do • How it should behave • What tone it should use • How it fits into the business • What checks and constraints matter That’s where tools like custom GPTs genuinely shine. They’re not software products in the traditional sense. They’re flexible assistants shaped around your business. With the right design, they can save huge amounts of time and deliver consistent, practical value without any of the complexity of building a full system. A more useful way to think about AI in 2026 Instead of “AI will build everything for you”, a healthier mindset is: AI speeds up the work, but you set the direction. For small businesses, that’s more than enough to make a real difference.
By Chris Witham August 21, 2025
Website Planet Interview
January 16, 2025
THOUGHT OF THE DAY: 'An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.' - Benjamin Franklin EXPLANATION: This quote reminds us of the enduring value of learning and education as a pathway to success.
January 15, 2025
WORD: Egregious DEFINITION: Outstandingly bad or shocking. USAGE: 'The error in the report was so egregious it couldn’t be ignored.' ORIGIN: From the Latin 'egregius,' originally meaning 'distinguished' or 'remarkable,' later used ironically to highlight glaring faults.
January 14, 2025
TRADE FOCUS: Chef AI APPLICATIONS: - MENU DESIGN: AI creates innovative recipes based on available ingredients. - SUPPLY MANAGEMENT: AI predicts ingredient needs to minimise waste. - CUSTOMER INSIGHTS: AI analyses feedback to improve dish offerings. - SKILL TRAINING: AI provides virtual cooking lessons and techniques.
January 13, 2025
On 13th January 1898, Émile Zola published 'J'accuse,' an open letter defending Alfred Dreyfus, which became a pivotal moment in the Dreyfus Affair.
January 12, 2025
IDIOM OF THE DAY: Bite off more than you can chew FIGURATIVE MEANING: To take on a task that is too difficult to manage. TYPICAL USAGE: 'She bit off more than she could chew by agreeing to organise the entire event.' ORIGIN: Likely from the literal difficulty of chewing an overly large piece of food.
January 11, 2025
IDIOM OF THE DAY: Throw in the towel FIGURATIVE MEANING: To give up or admit defeat. TYPICAL USAGE: 'After hours of trying, he threw in the towel and called for help.' ORIGIN: From boxing, where a towel is thrown into the ring to signal surrender.
January 10, 2025
AI GENERATED HUMOUR: Why did the AI bring a notepad to the beach? To take down sandy data! This joke connects AI’s data-driven nature to a playful seaside scenario.
January 9, 2025
THOUGHT OF THE DAY: 'The only way to do great work is to love what you do.' - Steve Jobs EXPLANATION: This quote highlights the importance of passion in achieving excellence in one’s work.
January 8, 2025
WORD: Ineffable DEFINITION: Too great or extreme to be expressed in words. USAGE: 'The beauty of the sunrise was ineffable, leaving everyone speechless.' ORIGIN: From the Latin 'ineffabilis,' meaning 'unutterable,' often used to describe profound experiences.
January 7, 2025
TRADE FOCUS: Jeweller AI APPLICATIONS: - DESIGN CREATION: AI generates intricate jewellery designs based on current trends. - GEMSTONE ANALYSIS: AI evaluates the quality and authenticity of gemstones. - CUSTOM ORDERS: AI creates virtual previews for bespoke pieces. - INVENTORY MANAGEMENT: AI optimises stock levels and demand forecasting.
January 6, 2025
On 6th January 1838, Samuel Morse successfully demonstrated the first public telegraph message, marking a revolution in communication.
January 5, 2025
IDIOM OF THE DAY: Put all your eggs in one basket FIGURATIVE MEANING: To risk everything on a single venture. TYPICAL USAGE: 'Investing all your money in one stock is like putting all your eggs in one basket.' ORIGIN: Likely from the precariousness of carrying all eggs in one basket, risking breaking them all if dropped.
January 4, 2025
IDIOM OF THE DAY: Spill the beans FIGURATIVE MEANING: To reveal a secret. TYPICAL USAGE: 'She spilled the beans about the surprise party.' ORIGIN: Likely derived from voting practices in ancient Greece where beans were used, and spilling them prematurely could reveal results.
More Posts