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Choosing the right large language model can feel overwhelming with so many options out there, especially if you’re not exactly living and breathing AI
But as we’ve worked through each one, we’ve gotten a real sense of what they’re good at (and where they fall short).
So, let’s talk about what to use, when.
Let’s start with ChatGPT and OpenAI-o1.
OpenAI’s latest model is impressive, and people are hyped about its “reasoning” abilities — basically, it’s designed to tackle more logic-heavy stuff alongside the creative tasks that ChatGPT has always been great at.
When to Use It: Anything involving more complex logic, or when you need tailored responses, like for coding or detailed content editing.
Claude is our go-to for summarizing and making sense of long documents.
It’s also fantastic at storytelling, which is helpful if you’re in content creation or need to simplify dense information.
Best Use Case: Summarizing or creating content when you need a straightforward, reliable tool that’s easy to navigate.
Google’s Gemini feels like it’s in a league of its own when it comes to handling tons of data.
We love that it has a massive context window, meaning it can hold and process entire books if needed. Plus, it has a quirky new tool called Notebook LM that turns docs into a mini-podcast for you.
When to Turn to Gemini: When you need to process a mountain of data at once, or if you’re in the mood for an audio summary while I’m doing something else.
Llama isn’t necessarily the most advanced, but because it’s open-source, it’s our go-to when privacy is a concern.
Unlike the others, Llama can run offline on your computer, so it doesn’t share data with a big tech company.
When It Makes Sense to Use: Anytime privacy is key, like with sensitive internal data, or when you just need a quick local solution.
Grok is a fun one — it’s a social media native, integrated with X (formerly Twitter).
It’s a decent model and comes with a strong image generator, Flux One, that can make super-realistic visuals. But where it really shines is pulling in Twitter data in real-time.
Ideal Use: Social media research and generating realistic visuals for content.
Perplexity isn’t technically an LLM in the traditional sense. Instead, it’s an AI-powered research tool that pulls information from the internet and then uses a model to organize it.
It’s our go-to when I need quick, accurate information or a second opinion on a topic.
When I Use Perplexity: Anytime I’m in “research mode” or need up-to-date insights for blog posts, presentations, or meetings.
Finding the right LLM can be as simple as matching a tool’s strengths to your needs.
Our advice? Try out a few, and don’t hesitate to mix and match to get the best results.
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