Prompt engineering on the verge of extinction 

July 6, 2023

According to Don Giannatti, prompt engineering, the process of designing, crafting, and formulating effective, clear, and specific instructions or queries that guide AI models in generating desired outputs or responses, is on the verge of extinction in a relatively short time.

Giannatti says as AI becomes smarter and better understands human words and phrases, the need for precisely crafted prompts will diminish. Furthermore, AI is now capable of creating its own prompts, making the human expertise of prompt engineering less important, and prompts are not universally applicable as factors in the downfall of prompt engineering.

AI, according to Giannattii, can now understand our words and phrases in the same manner that humans do. They no longer require well-written prompts; instead, they may generate their own by just asking a question. The need for quick engineering is diminishing as AI progresses and learns on its own.

Furthermore, the introduction of GPT4 and the upcoming GPT5 has given AI systems the capacity to provide complex and contextually relevant suggestions with minimum input. This is compounded by the fact that prompts are not uniformly relevant. They are limited in their adaptability since they are suited to certain AI models and versions.

The sources for this piece include an article in Medium.

Top Stories

Related Articles

March 27, 2026 Google has warned that quantum computers could break widely used encryption systems by 2029, urging organisations to more...

March 23, 2026 Intel has informed major PC manufacturers it will raise prices on its consumer CPUs by about 10 more...

March 19, 2026 Arizona has filed criminal charges against prediction market platform Kalshi for allowing users to bet on elections, more...

March 12, 2026 Nvidia demonstrated a hands-free driver-assist system developed with Mercedes during a recent test drive through San Francisco. more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn