Transcript
TAirq97G7ow • How to Use Grok AI Better than 99% of People
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Kind: captions Language: en If you're just using Grock like a regular chatbot, you're missing the entire point of why it exists. I've spent weeks testing Grock against ChatGpt, Claude, and Gemini on the same tasks, and there are specific things Grock does that the others literally cannot. So, I'm going to show you everything from the basics to the advanced features. And by the end, you'll know Grock better than 99% of people using it right now. To show you how all of this works, I'm going to create a completely new piece of content using only Grock. And the first thing I need is a topic. I'll type what topics in the AI space are getting unusual engagement on X right now. And this is where Grock does something no other major AI tool can do. Grock has direct access to public posts on X, which means it's pulling from millions of real conversations happening right now. Chat GPT and Claude would search the web and give me articles from yesterday or last week, but Grock shows me what people are actually saying in this current moment. Looking at the results, there's a backlash building against overhyped AI agents. Users are increasingly frustrated with tools marketed as fully autonomous that still require constant supervision, prompt tweaking, and error correction, turning automation into another job rather than a timesaver. And now I have something with real tension behind it. But before I write anything, I need to understand the full picture. And that's where deep search comes in. Deep search is Grock's autonomous research mode, and it combines web sources with live X data in a way nothing else can. To trigger it, you just include using deep search in your prompt. I'll type using deep search, give me a comprehensive analysis of the current state of AI agents. What are the main tools? What do they promise? What are the actual results people are getting? And where is the gap between marketing and reality? Grock generates subqueries and searches both the web and X simultaneously. This takes 30 seconds to a few minutes depending on complexity, but the output is genuinely researched with citations. What makes this valuable is that you get both sides. Official sources tell you what the tools claim to do and expost tell you what's actually happening when people use them. Here's what comes back. The main players that show up are crew AI and various AI employee platforms. Instead of bold claims about full automation or autonomy, what surfaces is the gap between demos and real usage? Users who are actually trying to make these systems work describe long setup times, brittle configurations, and agents that frequently hallucinate or fail once workflows become multi-step. Rather than running independently, these agents require continuous supervision, prompt adjustments, and manual intervention, turning what looks impressive in demos into a frustrating highmaintenance experience in practice. And now that I have the research, the next step is writing the script. And this is where Grock immediately separates itself from the competition. One of the first things you'll notice is that Grock is trained to be significantly more direct than its competitors. While ChatGpt Hedges and Claude tries to stay perfectly balanced, Grock is willing to actually take a position, which is exactly what you need for content that cuts through the noise. To make sure that attitude carries through to the writing, I'll set up some custom instructions. Inside the drop down on the right, I'll tell it specifically to write with confidence. No hedging language. Take clear positions. Be conversational, not formal. With that locked in, I can finally type, "Write me an intro for a piece about AI agents being overhyped." The angle is that set it and forget it. Automation is mostly marketing, and reality requires constant supervision that defeats the purpose. Make it punchy. And Grock starts with a direct statement that takes a stance. The writing has voice and sounds like a person with an opinion. To see why this matters, let's run the exact same prompt through Chat GPT and Claude side by side. Chat GPT gives me standard corporate speak. It's hedged, safe, and basically says nothing. Claude is a little better, but it's still sitting on the fence. But Grock actually gives me a real take with some actual personality behind it. That's a sentence someone would actually want to read. It has attitude. It's specific, and it makes a point without apologizing for it. The reason this matters is that content with personality performs better. Generic, carefully balanced writing gets scrolled past. And you can push Grock even further. If I want it more aggressive, I just tell it, "Rewrite that last section, but make it more blunt. Don't be polite about the overpromising, and it will. It'll give you content that other AI tools would refuse to generate because they're too focused on being inoffensive." The point isn't to be contrarian for the sake of it. The point is that when you need content with a spine, Grock actually delivers. I'll keep going. I'll type, "Now write me three specific examples of the gap between AI agent marketing and reality. Use the research from earlier. Be specific and slightly provocative. Brock pulls from the deep search results and gives me concrete examples with actual numbers and real frustrations. The writing is tight and doesn't pad sentences with unnecessary qualifiers. I've got my intro and my key points and it took a fraction of the time it would take to edit chat GPT's output into something usable. Now, I need a visual to support this content and Grock handles that too. On the left sidebar, there's an option called imagine. Click it and you're in Grock's creative mode where you can generate images or videos. I'll select image from the drop down and choose 16 to9 for the aspect ratio. The content is about AI agents being overhyped, so I want something that captures that tension visually. I'll type a robot sitting at a desk looking overwhelmed surrounded by floating error messages and tangled wires, dramatic lighting, digital art style, slightly dystopian mood, and right off the bat, it gives me a lot of options to choose from. I can just keep scrolling and it will keep generating new images endlessly. It really speeds up the process because I don't have to stop and hit generate again. I just scroll until I see the one I want. This is significantly faster than the typical workflow where you generate, don't like it, tweak the prompt, generate again, and repeat. Grock also handles requests that other tools are more restrictive about. If you want to generate an image of a public figure giving a keynote or a movie character in a new scenario, Grock will do it where other tools often refuse. For video, switch to video in the drop down. I'll type a robot at a desk. Error messages popping up around it. The robot putting its head in its hands. Looping animation. Grock generates a short clip with synchronized motion which honestly is not going to replace dedicated video tools but for quick visual elements it works perfectly. Now I have a trending topic found in real time deep research both marketing and reality written content with personality and visuals to support it all from one tool in one workflow. The bottom line is that Grock handles real-time research and unfiltered writing better than anything else I've tested. And for content that needs to feel current and human that combination is hard to beat. But there's another tool by Google called Notebook LM that approaches AI from the opposite angle. Instead of pulling everything from the open web and social media, it only analyzes documents you give it, which means every answer is grounded in your actual sources with exact citations and zero hallucination. I've made a video breaking down Notebook LM and showing you exactly how to use it. And when you're ready to add it to your workflow, click the video on screen and I'll show you how it works.