Last Friday, 20 Mar 2026, this "Hack of the Day" was published by The Times of India.
My agents generated it entirely automatically. Here's how that happened.

On 12 Feb 2026, I met Rohit Saran, Managing Editor at The Times of India.
"Our biggest challenge is the starting challenge. What story to do?" he said. "We waste a lot of time and we starve stories because of this."
What if AI could help with that? We talked for nearly two hours - and left asking: "Should we do just a daily visual newspaper?"
Rohit connected Saurabh, Saikat, and Sajeev, so we could explore what's possible.
FIND PROMISING CANDIDATES.
The Times of India already had recurring formats they wanted to drive with AI.
We weren't beginning from scratch. There was rich material and a realization that recurring newsroom formats are ideal for AI because they are structured, frequent, and feedback-rich.
Hack of the Day stood out: small, recurring, text-only, needing little research, with a clear purpose — useful tech tips for everyday readers. Saikat defined 3 concrete goals for this:
STUDY THE ARTIFACT.
So, on 6 Mar 2026, Saikat sent me 10 samples of Hack of the Day to understand the format, layout, variety, etc.
By 10 Mar 2026, I had a few prototypes ready. I asked ChatGPT a series of questions:
... to create a cards.json.
Then I asked Claude Code to "Create a template.html that can be combined (e.g. via mustache) with a JSON that, when run, produces the EXACT visual output as the cards in *.avif."
Saikat reviewed these and noted that some had already been done by TOI, but some looked new and usable. So the first batch served as a proof of possibility.
DO MORE OF WHAT AI DOES WELL
To get the output fast and to make iterations easier, I did a few things that are easy for AI and not natural for humans:
These make iterations faster, richer, more reliable and reviewable.
ITERATE FEEDBACK FAST
During the session on 10 Mar, I spoke with ChatGPT and told it (verbally) what Saikat said:
Look, all of this is nice, but some of these have already been covered by the Times of India's previous hack of the days.
Also, I get a feeling that it's getting a little repetitive. Let's go a little global, doesn't have to be only about Indian government sites.
Let's talk about things that people use on a practical, day-to-day basis and see what is really useful and not always obvious to them, even though there is a widespread adoption of some of these.
It doesn't have to be technological hacks either. It could be social hacks, educational hacks, cultural hacks.
The point is that it should be from some primary source. Now, keeping this in mind, give me about a dozen of these and give it in the JSON format that you've done so far.
Feedback is the critical loop. The system improved not because the model changed, but because the editorial feedback got sharper.
I explicitly asked for voice-note feedback on WhatsApp to speed up the review cycles. Just one line explaining what's rejected and why. By 17 Mar 2026, we had 64 hacks, of which 32 were rejected for these reasons:
RETAIN EXISTING VISUAL FORMATS
People are used to seeing things in a certain way. That inertia has value (brand recognition, reader familiarity, workflow compatibility, etc.) That was reflected in the granular feedback Sajeev shared about the design (which I translated directly into prompts):
We still haven't nailed it perfectly. This is a long tail. The big win is getting it to the point where manual edits are minor.
ALIGN WITH EXISTING WORKFLOWS
TOI needed outputs designers could adjust in their workflow. The team uses InDesign / Illustrator, so we needed to:
PUSH FOR PRODUCTION
New workflows take time to stick. 6 Mar to 20 Mar (two weeks) is probably record time. The actual generation took a few hours. Reviews took a few days. Most of the time was just the gap between meetings, where ideas sink in. The impetus came from the meetings where I kept asking: "What's stopping us from publishing?" and then fixing that.
On 20 Mar 2026, the first AI-assisted Hack of the Day was published. More followed.
My agents are an integral part of a newsroom.
This is so cool!