Most people still think AI means typing a question into a chatbot and getting a paragraph back. That idea is already way out of date.
I just watched a walkthrough that proves it, and I had to break it down for you. The creator behind this video runs through 12 quick AI tricks, and every single one takes less than 60 seconds to pull off. He cloned his own face, made a full song from one sentence, and turned a messy folder of receipts into an accountant-ready report without opening Excel once. I was genuinely impressed at how little effort each one needed.
What I love is that none of this is theory. The original poster shows the actual tools, the actual clicks, and the actual results. So if a friend ever asks you “what can AI really do for me?”, this is the kind of stuff you point them to.
🎯 The big idea: small tasks, instant wins
Here’s the key takeaway from the creator’s demo. AI isn’t just for big, complicated projects. The real magic right now is in tiny everyday tasks that used to eat your time. Making a graphic. Editing a video. Building a slide deck. Organizing files.
Each of these used to mean learning software, hiring someone, or grinding through it yourself. The expert shows that the same jobs now take a single prompt and a minute of waiting. That shift is what makes this worth your attention. You don’t need to become a power user. You just need to know which tool does which job.
Let me group his 12 hacks into the three areas where I think they’ll actually change your week.
🎨 Cloning yourself: voice, face, and a 3D figure
The first batch is the fun, jaw-dropping stuff, and it’s more useful than it looks.
- Become a 3D action figure. The creator uploads a photo to ChatGPT or Gemini, asks it to turn him into a collectible figurine, then takes it further with a platform called Tripo 3D. That tool can prep a real, printable model, and it’ll even 3D print and ship the figure to you. Great for content, gifts, or just showing off.
- Clone your voice. Using ElevenLabs, the original poster records a short 10 to 60 second clip of himself talking. The tool builds a voice model that reads any script in his actual voice. Think narration, audiobooks, or quick voiceovers without a mic setup.
- Clone your whole face. This is where I sat up. With HeyGen, the contributor feeds in a few minutes of footage and gets a full digital twin, his face, his voice, even his mannerisms, reading any script he types. The avatar he showed wasn’t him at all, and honestly you’d never know.
- Make a song from one line. He uses Suno, the top AI music platform right now, to turn a single sentence into a finished track. You can add your own lyrics or keep it instrumental. He pulled this off on the free version, and it still sounded clean.
The practical angle here is content creation. If you make videos, run a brand, or post online, these four alone replace a recording studio, a voice actor, and a designer.
📊 Turning work into finished output
The second group is the part that made me think about my own to-do list. These are the work hacks.
- Research into video. The creator drops a PDF into NotebookLM and uses its “video overview” feature to turn dense research into a short, watchable explainer. A 20-page document becomes a two-minute video. He notes it can also pull fresh sources with deep research and spin up infographics in different styles.
- Presentations from a prompt. With Gamma, the expert types a simple prompt and watches a 10-slide deck build itself, images included, in under a minute. There’s an AI agent inside it, so you edit by typing plain English instead of dragging boxes around.
- Edit video by editing text. This one is clever. Descript turns your video or audio into a text document, and deleting a sentence deletes that part of the footage. No editing software skills needed. Its “Underlord” feature strips filler words automatically, and one click upgrades rough audio to studio quality.
- Translate with lip sync. Back in HeyGen, the contributor dubs his videos into other languages, like Hindi and Japanese, with the lips actually matching the new words. Huge for reaching a wider audience.
I think this cluster is where most people will save real hours. These are the boring tasks nobody wants to do, now handled in a coffee break.
🤖 AI agents doing the actual work
The last few hacks point at where things are heading: tools that don’t just answer, they act.
- A daily planning agent. Inside ChatGPT, the creator uses an agent that connects to his calendar, email, and Slack, then builds his day for him. He says it’s how he starts every morning now.
- Boring data into a dashboard. In Claude, he turns a plain spreadsheet into an interactive 3D dashboard with one prompt. These are shareable links his team can open, no software required.
- Receipts into a report. The finale is Claude’s co-work feature on the desktop app. He points it at a folder of receipt photos and PDFs, and it produces a clean PDF presentation plus an organized Excel file, dropped right back on his desktop. He just emails it and he’s done.
That last one is the clearest picture of where AI is going. You describe the outcome, and the tool handles the steps.
Worth a watch
The person who shared this packed a lot into one video, and seeing each tool in action is way more convincing than reading about it. If any of these hacks fit your work, watch the full walkthrough to catch the exact clicks and settings he uses. Then go try one. Sixty seconds is all it takes.