A “name that thing” recognition hub for your real life — drop in a snap,
screenshot, or description and it routes you to the right mini-GPT for a
clear answer with story-ready detail.
Pre-tuned for everyday “what is that?” moments — animals, places,
objects, patterns, and mystery parts.
Built-in routing to sibling Tool-ettes like Critter Spotter,
Roost Wrangler, and Snap Decoder so each question goes to the right
specialist.
Outputs that are friendly, tagged, and ready to hand off into other
Glee-fully Tools — no shame, no jargon, just solid answers.
Use this section to explain the Tool’s job in one sitting. Think:
“If someone only read this panel, they’d know exactly when to open this GPT instead of vanilla ChatGPT.”
Core job
Turn your raw “what is this?” moments — photos, screenshots, sky shots, random
parts, and saved quotes — into clear names, tags, and story-ready summaries you
can reuse across the Glee-fully suite.
Who it’s for
Built for the curious and observant: thrifters, DIY fixers, hobbyists, parents,
stargazers, travelers, and anyone who keeps snapping photos of “stuff to look up
later.”
How it works
You bring the input — image, screenshot, or description. Identity Known routes it
to the right Tool-ette, asks smart follow-up questions, then returns an ID with
context, tags, and exportable notes.
Why use this Tool instead of plain ChatGPT?
Here’s the secret sauce: Identity Known isn’t just “search with pictures.”
It’s a routed recognition hub with opinionated patterns, safety checks, and
friendly explanations tuned to everyday people.
Pre-tuned brain
Identity Known ships pre-loaded with recognition workflows for animals, plants,
landmarks, furniture, motifs, and mystery objects, so you skip the guessy
back-and-forth you’d have with plain ChatGPT.
Guardrails & taste
It stays human and honest: clear about uncertainty, cautious around
safety-sensitive topics, and never condescending when you don’t know the name
for something. You get confidence ranges, not fake certainty.
Reusable patterns
Recognitions come back as reusable patterns — mini reference cards with names,
tags, how-to-use notes, and search terms. You can pass those straight into
Treasured Finds, Traveler’s Guide, or Organized Life.
Where Glee-fully Identity Known lives in the Glee-fully ecosystem
Connect this Tool to its neighbors so visitors understand how the
whole toolbox fits together.
Parent · Toolbox
Glee-fully Identity Known is one of the core Tools inside the
Glee-fully Toolbox
— the recognition branch that catches your snapshots and “mystery objects”
so other Tools can put them to work.
Give people a tiny playbook: what to bring into the conversation,
how much context to paste, and what “success” looks like.
1. Bring your inputs
Grab whatever you’re curious about: a photo of a plant or critter, a room or
building, a sky shot, a screenshot, or a quick text/voice description if you
can’t share the image.
2. Start with a guided prompt
Try:
“I just uploaded something. Walk me through what this likely is, how
confident you are, and what I should notice for next time.”
3. Iterate together
Ask for the follow-through you need: a plain-language explanation, a reference
card with tags, a one-liner for your notes, or a handoff into another
Glee-fully Tool.
Example prompts for Glee-fully Identity Known
Drop these straight into the Tool or tweak them to match what you’re trying to
recognize.
Getting oriented
“Give me a quick overview of the types of things you can help me
recognize.”
“Here are a few photos and screenshots I’m curious about. What kinds of
questions are you best at answering?”
Deep work
“I just uploaded this image. Tell me what this likely is, how you know, and
what I should pay attention to.”
“Compare these two items, explain the differences in plain English, and
suggest when I’d pick one over the other.”
Follow‑through
“Turn what you just identified into a mini reference card with tags, a
one-sentence description, and search terms.”
“Summarize what you recognized today and create a short note I can paste
into my journal or send to a friend.”