DeepQuery understands natural language, so the single biggest thing you can do is ask a full question instead of typing keywords. Here's how to get consistently great answers.
Write like you'd ask a person
| Instead of… | Try… |
|---|---|
| "karpathy learning ai" | "What does Andrej Karpathy recommend for actually learning AI from scratch?" |
| "best espresso machine" | "What espresso machine do coffee experts recommend under $500, and why?" |
| "jensen huang ai jobs" | "What has Jensen Huang said about AI's impact on jobs in the last year?" |
A few habits that help
- Name the person or scope if you have one. "according to economists," "in recent interviews" both sharpen the search — or use @channel search to lock to one creator.
- Ask one clear thing at a time. You can always follow up — DeepQuery keeps the conversation's context.
- Say what you want from the answer. "summarize the main arguments," "give me both sides," "just the practical steps."
- Use follow-ups to go deeper rather than re-asking from scratch: "expand the second point," "any counter-arguments?"
Tip: If an answer feels thin, switch the response mode up a level — veridive will reason harder and search wider before answering.
