But we won't get any of that, because the prime directive of LLMs is to burn tokens like there's no tomorrow. Burn tokens on a naïve answer without asking clarifying questions. Burn tokens on writing, debugging, and running a Python script or accessing and parsing 10 websites without asking for consent. Burn tokens on half-baked images with misspellings and 31 fingers. Burn tokens arguing "how many 'r's in strawberry?". Burn tokens asking a followup question at the end of every single answer, begging the user to re-engage and burn more tokens.
There is a little red "Stop" control when text output is being produced, at least, but does "Stop" halt everything and throw away the context? Re-prompt from the beginning?
The "maximize tokens burnt" prime directive is not to be found in any system prompt or user documentation. It is seemingly a common feature of the training for any consumer model.
Currently, if I'm using voice for an LLM, I use the voice dictation in the keyboard feature, because then the response is in text. There is no way to prevent "responding in kind" if I query the thing with audio. Or in Swahili.