LetsMisBehave
Eccentric
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2022
- Posts
- 71
At the risk of allowing the bots to get better at imitating humans, I was wondering whether it might be worth people sharing whether there are common features to stories which suffer delays and those which don't and whether there are lessons we humans can learn from each other.
Having been in a job where my day would be mixed between things I could make the call very quickly, things where I knew that I needed a cold towel and hours of undisturbed thinking time, and others where I sensed that I was not being given all the facts and had to work out what I needed to ask to elicit them, I can understand how difficult, but not urgent, calls end up in the Bermuda triangle of that's far too difficult ot there is something off.
Thus, as authors, it makes sense for us to ensure that we don't ring alarm bells unnecessarily.
The one bad delay I have suffered was my fault for messing up the numbering in a series. Third time around, this was pointed out. Still, my fault, and I'm not complaining.
Otherwise, they seem to go through in about 2 to 3 days and are mostly cleared for publication within 24 hours. Any additional delay I assume down to not having too many stories published each day
I use Grammarly because some of my earlier stories had weird typos, grammar issues, and punctuation problems. Some still slip through, but fewer than before. I always state that I have used Grammarly and rejected 80-90% of the suggested changes, even if they were arguably no worse or a miniscule improvement. Let's face it, it is one thing standardising internal reports and another thing making dialogue overly formal and stilted. Frankly, a lot of the suggestions are just plain weird. Still, I think explaining that up-front can do no harm.
Second, being UK-based and of a certain age, there are idiosyncratic turns of phrase and vocabulary that come naturally to me, which it would not be profitable for an AI to imitate. The more general point is that having a distinctive authorial voice (even if it cheeses off readers) probably helps get a story through the sniff test.
Having been in a job where my day would be mixed between things I could make the call very quickly, things where I knew that I needed a cold towel and hours of undisturbed thinking time, and others where I sensed that I was not being given all the facts and had to work out what I needed to ask to elicit them, I can understand how difficult, but not urgent, calls end up in the Bermuda triangle of that's far too difficult ot there is something off.
Thus, as authors, it makes sense for us to ensure that we don't ring alarm bells unnecessarily.
The one bad delay I have suffered was my fault for messing up the numbering in a series. Third time around, this was pointed out. Still, my fault, and I'm not complaining.
Otherwise, they seem to go through in about 2 to 3 days and are mostly cleared for publication within 24 hours. Any additional delay I assume down to not having too many stories published each day
I use Grammarly because some of my earlier stories had weird typos, grammar issues, and punctuation problems. Some still slip through, but fewer than before. I always state that I have used Grammarly and rejected 80-90% of the suggested changes, even if they were arguably no worse or a miniscule improvement. Let's face it, it is one thing standardising internal reports and another thing making dialogue overly formal and stilted. Frankly, a lot of the suggestions are just plain weird. Still, I think explaining that up-front can do no harm.
Second, being UK-based and of a certain age, there are idiosyncratic turns of phrase and vocabulary that come naturally to me, which it would not be profitable for an AI to imitate. The more general point is that having a distinctive authorial voice (even if it cheeses off readers) probably helps get a story through the sniff test.