Product Thumbnail

Here, let me AI that for you.

for that friend who's too lazy to open ChatGPT

Funny

Generate a link for a friend that leads to a gently insulting animation of entering a prompt, and then redirects to ChatGPT itself.

Top comment

A friend had this idea at a dinner inspired by the old "Let me google that for you" website. When I found the domain (hereletmeaithatforyou.com) was available, I had to build it. I hope you enjoy using this with your AI Luddite friends and late-adopter parents! Hopefully it's educational and not too insulting :)

Comment highlights

That's so cool, at Bubobot we deal with monitoring systems that alert teams when something's wrong, and I can't help but think we need a similar tool for those colleagues who keep asking for manual AI help instead of setting up their monitoring. "Here, let me MONITOR that for you..." 😂

Finally something I can use to tell my lazy friends what they are supposed to do haha

Just stumbled upon this launch and was instantly drawn in by the silly logo—great touch! 😄 This is such a fun and clever tool, definitely going to use it to help my parents get the hang of AI like Claude and Deepseek. Thanks for making AI adoption a little less intimidating and a lot more entertaining! Kudos!

After generating the link, I'm unsure whether login is required. How does the process work after redirection, and what is the underlying mechanism?

ChatGpt is revolutionizing AI interactions with its insightful,informative and engaging responses -a game changer in tech.

This is good idea and also funny, could be game changer too on the internet, thank you for the hardwork

I can think of 30 people I can (should) send this to XD. Great launch guys! @rajiv_ayyangar

Also, am I the only one thinking of the "Let me do it for you" song with that dog?

I WAS WONDERING WHEN SOMEONE WAS GOING TO MAKE THIS!! My favorite way of being passive aggressive is BACK, baby!

Congratulations on launching "Here, let me AI that for you"! This innovative approach cleverly addresses the common issue of engagement with AI tools.

How do you envision users sharing these links to maximize both humor and utility in their interactions?