Chat kitchenPlay → read → next · ~9 min

Tutorials · Chapter B (2/4) · ~9 min

Home and life helper

Play → read → next

Use AI for real life tasks.

Playground

Home & life helper

Pick a real-life task. Run the template prompt.

Recap

What you just did

LifeTaskPicker matched everyday chores to a sharp ask — meals, errands, messages to family, tiny plans. You practiced picking a life task and giving constraints a real kitchen and calendar actually have: time, kids, budget, leftover rice.

Teach

How it works

Home prompts win when they sound like a text to a helpful friend who knows your fridge:

Plan dinner for 3 tonight.
Time: 35 min max. Skill: beginner.
Must use: chicken thighs, rice, one green thing.
Avoid: dairy, oven (broken).
Give: 1 recipe title, ingredients I might still need, numbered steps, and a 2-minute cleanup tip.

Errand / weekend micro-plan:

I have Saturday free from 10am–2pm.
Goals: groceries + return a package + 30 min walk.
I live near [neighborhood]. Prefer walking / transit.
Output: a timed itinerary with buffers, plus a backup if rain.

Family message polish (life, not corporate):

Rewrite this text to my sibling so it sounds warm, not naggy.
Keep the ask clear. Under 4 sentences.
Draft: [paste]

The pattern: name the life domain, constraints, and the shape of the answer. You’re not asking AI to “be productive” — you’re asking it to solve tonight’s dinner or Saturday’s window.

Use it

When you'd use this

  • Empty fridge / full fridge, no plan
  • Packing lists and trip day-of timelines
  • Softening or clarifying a personal message

Watch out

Watch out

Don’t paste full addresses, delivery codes, or kids’ school details into chats. For allergies and medical diets, treat AI as a brainstorming buddy and double-check labels yourself. Recipes can be wrong on times and temps — use judgment.

Try next

Try this next

Open your fridge photo-in-your-head. Write one dinner prompt with must-use ingredients and one hard no. Cook what you like best from the reply (or adapt).