MODULE 1 — LLM’s are like Guitars
A guitar is placed in your hands. You’ve never played before. You hold it… a little unsure. You strum. Randomly. No rhythm. No control. Just sound. What comes out… …is noise. Now take the same guitar… …and give it to a trained musician. The
A guitar is placed in your hands. You’ve never played before. You hold it… a little unsure. You strum. Randomly. No rhythm. No control. Just sound. What comes out… …is noise. Now take the same guitar… …and give it to a trained musician. They don’t rush. They hold it differently. Their fingers rest with intention. They strum once. And something changes. The same strings… the same instrument… the same physical object… but now— it produces music. Emotion. Something that feels alive. Pause. Look carefully. Nothing about the guitar changed. Not the strings. Not the wood. Not the sound waves. The only thing that changed… …was the person playing it. Now replace the guitar… with an LLM. A Large Language Model. One person sits in front of it… types something quickly… gets an answer… and moves on. Another person sits in front of the same model… pauses… thinks… asks with clarity… and something different happens. The same model… the same system… the same intelligence underneath… But one interaction produces noise. The other produces insight. The model did not change. The system did not change. The thinker changed. The skill of effectively generating relevant usable coherent answer from an LLM that is trained on all available knowledge is prompt engineering. Are you ready to learn how to play the guitar now ? Oops … I Mean .. Are you ready to learn how to play the LLM now ? Let’s deep dive !
