I have to say, your LLM NaNoGenMo is really really cool. I tried last year and never got around to submit it and this year I plainly forgot. But the type of automatic travel is very INTRIGUING. I might need to play around with the code, this does spark some ideas! And Venice, Barcelona and Iceland are only my favorite places, so what gives. The experience of reading long form LLM content always feels a bit weird, but maybe that would be different I didn't know it was AI written.
Thanks! I was kind of afraid only I found it fun(ny), I haven't heard much reaction :D Yeah, one of the things I found most interesting, aside from the random data choices for the "trip," was how the review text nicely structured a rewrite for a good model. I actually thought GPT4 did a great job on this one! (Hmm, maybe I should get back to cleaning up my code to make it more usable and readable.)
Always a pleasure to read. Thanks so much for writing this!
If you haven't already read it, you might enjoy The Spear Cuts Through Water by Simon Jimenez. It's quite creative, in form and content, with recursive, nesting dolls of narrative.
I have to say, your LLM NaNoGenMo is really really cool. I tried last year and never got around to submit it and this year I plainly forgot. But the type of automatic travel is very INTRIGUING. I might need to play around with the code, this does spark some ideas! And Venice, Barcelona and Iceland are only my favorite places, so what gives. The experience of reading long form LLM content always feels a bit weird, but maybe that would be different I didn't know it was AI written.
Thanks! I was kind of afraid only I found it fun(ny), I haven't heard much reaction :D Yeah, one of the things I found most interesting, aside from the random data choices for the "trip," was how the review text nicely structured a rewrite for a good model. I actually thought GPT4 did a great job on this one! (Hmm, maybe I should get back to cleaning up my code to make it more usable and readable.)
Always a pleasure to read. Thanks so much for writing this!
If you haven't already read it, you might enjoy The Spear Cuts Through Water by Simon Jimenez. It's quite creative, in form and content, with recursive, nesting dolls of narrative.
Hi Shawn! Huh, I have had that on my list, will move it up to the top :) Thanks!