AXHUB5 cards

Start with life, not work
— five things tonight

If AI is new to you, you don't have to start with work.
Tonight's dinner, weekend plans, a resale post.
Try the things where a wrong answer costs nothing, and you get a feel for it.

All with one free chatbot — a smartphone is enough

Life first1 / 5

01

Open the fridge and ask

Tonight's dinner is the easiest start.
Just read out what's in the fridge.

It's like a cook who knows your ingredients answering,
which feels different from digging through recipes by search.

Copy and use "I have eggs, tofu, green onion, and kimchi in the fridge. Just two dinner ideas that take under 20 minutes. Something with less washing up."
Tell it what you dislike ("skip the spicy") and it gets better.

Note This deck cites no figures — all of it is suggestions to copy

Life first2 / 5

02

Have it plan your weekend

The trick is to give the conditions the way you'd tell a person.
Who with, how long, the budget, what you dislike.

If the plan doesn't fit, don't toss it — have it revise.
"My younger one hates walking. Redo it mostly indoors."
This back-and-forth is what most sets it apart from search.

Copy and use "It's going to rain this weekend. Just three things I can do at home with my kids (7 and 10). No supplies needed."

Caution Hours and admission change, so check the official notice before you go

Life first3 / 5

03

Turn long text into plain words

A school newsletter, an insurance notice, a building management notice.
Paste the long text you'd rather not read and ask just one thing.
"Tell me only what I have to do and by when."

It's also the use that gets the best response among older adults.

Copy and use "From the notice below, sum up in three lines: 1) what I have to do 2) by when 3) what happens if I don't. [paste the notice]"

Caution For documents involving money, contracts, or health, treat the summary as a reference and check the original too

Life first4 / 5

04

Hand off a resale listing

Just read out the item details and the post is quick.
Don't hide flaws like scratches — call them out too;
an honest post gets faster replies.

You can even have it draft your response to price haggling.

Copy and use "I want to sell a 3-year-old stroller. Scratch on a wheel, the rest clean. 50,000 won. Write it in five lines, polite and appealing."

Note Curious about the going rate? Check the actual sale prices of the same item in an app first

Life first5 / 5

05

Take a photo and ask

If typing is a hassle, there's the camera.
Two outfits you're torn between, a wine label, an assembly manual.
Snap it, upload, and just ask "which is better?"

For a manual, "explain step 3 in simpler terms" works well.

A line worth keeping Don't upload photos with faces, ID cards, or card numbers.
Household items, scenery, and documents are generally fine.

Caution For "is this safe to eat" judgments about plants or food, treat it as fun only — leave safety to experts

AXHUBclosing

Start where mistakes are fine,
and five tries build the feel

If the dinner idea is no good, just eat something else.
Try it that casually about five times, and
you're left with the sense of "give the conditions, and if you don't like it, have it revise."

With that same sense, next comes one repetitive task at work.

The practice version of this card — go to lecture L0

Next: lecture L0 (play first) → L1 (one repetitive task) — axhub.net/lectures

AXHub card No.15 — this deck is a set of copy-and-try suggestions that cites no figures. For important information like prices, schedules, and health, always check the original and an expert.