StillStunned
Scruffy word herder
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2023
- Posts
- 8,456
Imagine being an actual proofreader and editor and understanding how crap AI is.Imagine having a proofreader, editor, and beta reader available 24/7.
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Imagine being an actual proofreader and editor and understanding how crap AI is.Imagine having a proofreader, editor, and beta reader available 24/7.
To quote Brandon Sanderson, Journey before destination"This class isn't about knowing the answers. It's about finding the answers. You'll never know all the answers, so you need to know how to get more answers, even after you're done with school." Me teaching stuff.
-Rocco
Better than Rhythm of War. Fourth-best Stormlight book. Still OK, not great.By the way, is anyone else reading Wind and Truth (and is somewhat annoyed by it)?
I'm about two-thirds through the book and so far, this is the worst of the series. My own ranking is WoR, WoK, RoW, OB, and WaT. It might change when I finish the book but I am not holding my breath, judging by what I've read so far. There is too much that wasn't done great.Better than Rhythm of War. Fourth-best Stormlight book. Still OK, not great.
-Annie
I actually dislike these huge lore drops and heavy side-character developments at the eleventh hour. There had been time to build most of the world in the previous four books. Yet he is still heavily world-building in this one, where we mostly want to see things being resolved.For me, RoW was just soooooo slooooow. I could cut 25% from it myself, and it would immediately be much better. Yes, that's arrogant.
WaT has great lore drops. And Adolin and Shallan. I'm not calling any other part of it "great".
-Annie
except when the steed hallucinates and decides it would like to indulge in a spot of murder - by which point it is often too late to decide that walking is actually quite an enjoyable activity.you learn to tame and ride the steed, you’ll be less inclined to walk on foot
Extra fun working in those areas with content that can't just be interpreted as standard text.Imagine being an actual proofreader and editor and understanding how crap AI is.
Actually it's more like the steed is a llama: an oversized sheep that spits. Good for wool and carrying loads, but unlikely to get you anywhere in a showjumping or dressage event.except when the steed hallucinates and decides it would like to indulge in a spot of murder - by which point it is often too late to decide that walking is actually quite an enjoyable activity.
Same joke, but Llama are indigenous to Peru and Bolivia. Not sure but I don't think they have a lot of camels down there.Same thing happened with an officer in French Foreign Legion and a camel, if I'm not mistaken. The punchline being, "Not to rush you, Captain, but when you're finished with the camel I'd like to ride into town to visit the brothel."
Depends on the application. For writing fiction this analogy works, but for something like a field guide to foraging mushrooms I'll go with Wanda's murderhorse. A kelpie, perhaps.Actually it's more like the steed is a llama: an oversized sheep that spits. Good for wool and carrying loads, but unlikely to get you anywhere in a showjumping or dressage event.
Definitely. There's a joy in retelling a good joke, like rereading a favourite book or watching reruns of a favourite show.Same joke, but Llama are indigenous to Peru and Bolivia. Not sure but I don't think they have a lot of camels down there.
And a good joke is always worth telling.
I wonder whether anyone's written a Lit story with kelpies before. Because now I want to.Depends on the application. For writing fiction this analogy works, but for something like a field guide to foraging mushrooms I'll go with Wanda's murderhorse. A kelpie, perhaps.
I count 28. I assume these aren't the seaweed variety?Definitely. There's a joy in retelling a good joke, like rereading a favourite book or watching reruns of a favourite show.
I wonder whether anyone's written a Lit story with kelpies before. Because now I want t
Tricksy shapeshifting water-horses: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/KelpieI count 28. I assume these aren't the seaweed variety?
With tentacles? Or do the sea urchins eat them?Tricksy shapeshifting water-horses: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelpie
Everything is better with tentacles. But the urchins might violate Lit's 18+ rule.With tentacles? Or do the sea urchins eat them?
that's a tautology. A friend is an equine vet, and according to her all horses are murderhorsesmurderhorse
As I expected, the descriptions of this are a bit more technical than I can grasp.Are there other writers here who've played with LLM prompt engineering? I've got pretty deep into it recently, and I'm sure some other people here have too. Meta's latest offering, Llama 3.3 70B, is as as powerful as anything I've used commercially, and it's free (and runs locally, so you don't need to watch your language or curb your fantasies). It can run with your ideas, and at the very least, it's an incredible "spitballing" partner for your creative ideas.
I'm really interested to hear anyone else's experience with LLM's for creative writing, chat prompts, etc.
I have long believed this. Even people who love horses keep telling me how mad they are.that's a tautology. A friend is an equine vet, and according to her all horses are murderhorses
Okay, I'll take your word on that. I still think I'm the only one who can define a character clearly. It's not been submitted yet, but I gave a long-standing character a previously undisclosed trait. She has a nostalgia for the early 20th Century, including ocean liners. I wondered if that fit in with the rest of what she's done, and I decided I'm going with it. It does show a side of her that I haven't used before, and she explains why it it interests her. Could I get the S.S. Normandie from a program, or maybe I misunderstood how you use it?The literary level of chat gpt is very low and is not a source of inspiration -its writing style is crass and riddled with trite metaphors and at best is a pastiche. So forget using any of its output directly.
But I referred in my o.p. to “spitballing” which doesn’t really require much intelligence or creativity - I remember actually doing this as a kid with my father who was a writer. I was just a sounding board.
Another thing that I’ve found useful is character. Instructing the ai to adopt a certain character , and then tweaking its behaviour as you go along , is really illuminating — it helps me, as the “prompt engineer”, to really learn how to define character clearly.