Five Days. Five Things AI Took Off Your Plate.
The AI Super Simplified Week in Review — everything you might've missed, in one scroll.
The AI Super Simplified Week in Review — everything you might've missed, in one scroll.
The AI Super Simplified Week in Review — everything you might've missed, in one scroll.
Here's the thing nobody says out loud: AI still can't do your job. But this week, five different times, it quietly did part of it — and none of it needed you to be technical. A non-coder shipped a real app. Agents started clocking in overnight. A sentence became a finished video. The pile only gets lighter from here.
Five issues, five copy-paste prompts, Monday to Friday. Tap any title to read it on the site, then grab the prompt.
TLDR: The week AI stopped waiting for instructions on every step. Build-your-own-software went mainstream, an economist explained why an AI crash wouldn't save your paycheck, Google emptied its I/O cannon, agents learned the night shift, and video became something you talk into existence.
You think faster than you type. Which means every typed prompt leaves out the constraints, examples, and edge cases that would have made the output actually useful.
89% of messages sent with zero edits. Used by teams at OpenAI, Vercel, and Clay. Free on Mac, Windows, and iPhone.
A Wall Street Journal tech columnist who'd never written a line of code spent one weekend and $45 building her own news app — and her professional-engineer husband was impressed. The gap between "I wish I had a tool that did X" and actually having it just collapsed.
Get the prompt → Spec your first vibe-coded internal tool
The WSJ's Greg Ip argued a sudden AI crash would barely dent the average paycheck — and that's not the comfort it sounds like. Workers' share of U.S. output just hit its lowest reading since 1947, and the issue maps exactly where you sit on that line.
Get the prompt → Score your AI capital-vs-labor exposure
Google's I/O keynote ran long and most of the loudest applause was for things you can't touch yet. So we ranked the four launches that matter by what you can actually do with them tonight — the version nobody else wrote.
Get the prompt → Your Google I/O 2026 briefing
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Google shipped agents that run on a schedule — they wake up, do the task, and have it waiting when you do. The question stopped being "can AI do this?" and became "what should I have it do while I sleep?"
Get the prompt → The Night-Shift Audit
Type one sentence, get a video — then change it by asking, like texting instructions to a designer. Google calls it Gemini Omni, and the first version is live right now. The skill that matters now isn't editing. It's describing.
Get the prompt → The Idea-to-Video Brief
That's five things off your plate in five days. Notice the pattern — last week AI could do a little; this week it does a little more. That's the whole story, and it's the one worth watching.
Every prompt above lives in the AI Super Simplified Prompt Library — searchable, free, growing every issue. See you Monday.
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