I didn’t realize it, but I ended up with two copies of this book—one from Blinkit, one from Amazon India. Honestly, it’s a very basic “ChatGPT for Dummies” kind of guide by Neil Dagger, who does have a solid computer science background from University College London. But this book? It just didn’t wow me.
You don’t really need a book to get a handle on ChatGPT—you can tinker with it for 5 to 10 minutes and pick it up way faster. The book does start with a bonus tip—150+ prompts you can scan via a QR code, which is a nice touch. But beyond that, it’s a lot of fluff. The author does use ChatGPT and Jasper AI to write it, and the chapters cover things like passive income—though, let’s be real, there’s no magic formula. The title is super misleading—no, ChatGPT won’t make you a millionaire overnight. It can help you create diet plans, be a relationship coach—but all of this is stuff you can figure out yourself.
Paper quality, though, is great—Penguin Random House India did a solid job printing in Sivakasi. Overall, it’s just okay—save your 250 rupees and explore ChatGPT on your own.