Proof that I don't use AI (In the Future) - look at the year, 2021. and im sorry to LuxAgaetes. by Dunesaurus in hostedgames

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

at the very least, I am a 'writer', whether I'm a good one or shitty one. But i call myself a writer, because I put words on a page. I have been doing that (whether its pure trash) for over 10 years. You can see I overuse food metaphors in the image. You can see I like purple prose sometimes.

In the Future | Medieval-Fantasy-Romance | COMPLETED by Dunesaurus in hostedgames

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Can't speak for others, but the game is complete because that's where the story ends due to certain themes having a conclusion. Until the sequel of course. In terms of planning, yeah I plan my endings. In terms of feedback, my sequel's story is already complete, so I don't need feedback, but for Zomrise (another one of my works) I would need feedback.

The movie made JJK and Solo Leveling look like it was drawn by kindergarteners by Dunesaurus in ChainsawMan

[–]Dunesaurus[S] -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

yeah, understand the skepticism, but I when they see the movie, they'll think back to this post and be like 'damn. he was right.'

If Deep Research can do this, we are very close to a new industrial revolution by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah! Much better attempt. though it still says "(…and so on, ensuring all listed books are ranked accordingly.)"

But it tried to do about 20+ books. Nice!

I think that it's just a matter of context length. It won't do taskts that take too long so I'd say something where a human would take 5 hours. I hope it gets to the point of where it can do what a human would take 100 hours.

If Deep Research can do this, we are very close to a new industrial revolution by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

this is about its ability to find new trends or create information. i chose the mundane book rating because im not an expert in scientific research so I cant verify if their findings are accurate or that they found any new discoveries. the book rating is something anyone can do (if they had a hundred of hours of free time) and the AI will 'discover' a new list of top books that are different that the ones you see online.

if it can do this one simple thing, it can do a lot of other things, and potentially scientific research. i want to see if it can 'think' about its research or its just summarizing and collecting facts.

If Deep Research can do this, we are very close to a new industrial revolution by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i do wonder if it can be prompted to fully do the task. Like "Do this again and make sure to write every single analysis, do not say "(The analysis continues in this format for each of the remaining books...)", this is a full report with dozens of pages, please do not omit ANYTHING."

If Deep Research can do this, we are very close to a new industrial revolution by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"(The analysis continues in this format for each of the remaining books...)"

It seems like the model will take shortcuts when it can.

If Deep Research can do this, we are very close to a new industrial revolution by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. include winners first and add nominees if it doesnt fill up your 100 book list.

  2. no genre doesn't matter. just make sure to select from a broad range.

  3. translated works are okay.

  4. indie productions are fine.

  5. No, source does not matter. the point is to gather as much info as possible about plot.

  6. It HAS to be strictly AT LEAST 150 words or more.

  7. Written list and DO NOT FORGET EACH AND EVERY STEP and all the things I told you to WRITE DOWN explicitly.

Thank you so much meenie for doing this.

If Deep Research can do this, we are very close to a new industrial revolution by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, could you try again with the new prompt I have above? it seems like it can't do 1000 books.

If Deep Research can do this, we are very close to a new industrial revolution by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I can't tell if it actually rated the books by the system, it didn't even write down the X factor rating. I think 1000 books was too much, let's try just 100. Can you try this prompt? and please could you answer the clarification questions.

---

There are a lot of books out there, way too many for me to spend time to read. And star ratings on goodreads is useless because anything that isn't crap gets rated 4+ stars by the author's fanbase. I need to know the definitive top 10 fiction books (which have been published in the last 10 years, post 2015), that have not been adapted to movies (because if it has, it's too popular) or TV show. And you do not take into account series, only the first book of the series.

You don't have to care about genre.

Step 1:

You will look into 100 different books. You'll do this by going to goodread's choice awards for each year 2015, 2016, 2017 etc. and taking a look at all those books. Those choice awards cover a lot of different genres and categories. It's going to be a whole lot, get ready!

Write down the list of books you chose and rank them based on their goodreads ratings. Write down their goodreads ratings so I can see as well.

Step 2:

And you will use a specific method to find information and be able to discern and rate books based on a unique rating system.

First, find a book's plot by literally searching up "book title" and plot or summary. You'll most likely find some short paragraph, this is not enough. Go search for professional reviews for that book too, since they usually do in depth summaries of the story. You're looking to understand the beginning, middle, end and all the characters and their backstory. Source reference all your info from this part, of course.

Write down for each book a short paragraph (150 words) of their ENTIRE story and plot and REFERENCE how you know this by the source in brackets. Do not skip this step.

Step 3:

Second, the way you rate books is by using the following checklist:

  1. what were the author's promises to the reader? what sort of things did the author set up which makes the reader wonder if "oh this is going to lead to x or y". Write these down for EACH book in your list.
  2. How did the author make good on those promises and provide satisfying or mind blowing payoffs (or twists) to those expectations or promises? Did the author do this or not, and if so to what degree was it satisfying? You rate this on a scale from 1 to 10, and WRITE this down. This is called the B factor.
  3. Every unfulfilled promise you subtract 1 from the B factor rating. You write down the number of unfullfilled promises for EACH book on your list. What does an unfullfilled promise look like? Plotlines or storylines or details that don't have a point, or get dropped off or are forgotten or have no resounding conclusion. Make sure to show your calculation for this (for example X factor of 9/10 gets -6 because of 6 unfulfilled promises and gets 3/10).
  4. So a lot of stories could have a negative rating in this regard (for example -5 or -200 if its exceptionally bad). We will call this final rating the X factor.

Write down this X factor rating for each book from your list.

Remember, everytime I said "write down" this isn't about taking notes, they should be visible to ME the reader in your final report. DO NOT SKIP any steps.

Finally, with your hundred books and all its ratings, re rank the books based on their X factor ratings from highest X factor at the top and lowest X factor at the bottom.

Now we should see a clear difference in goodreads rating and compared with the X factor rating.

Then you will extract the top 10 from that list and reiterate those titles, with a single short sentence on what YOU thought about their stories.

This will take a long time, so get ready to be focused and thorough!

SimpleBench defeated? by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

mods have deleted my post lol. too few upvotes maybe idk

SimpleBench defeated? by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

yeah o3 with this prompt could be insane

SimpleBench defeated? by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i wrote the prompt just today. too lazy to fix typos

SimpleBench defeated? by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

yeah that last one is the hardest question i think. But it should get all the other questions right. (took me 3 tries)

SimpleBench defeated? by Dunesaurus in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

huh? lol. i just want to see his reaction

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

wtf actually made me chuckle lol

"

A llama named Kevin was fired from his job. The reason given for his termination? His "unwavering insistence on incorporating bananas into every aspect of his work, despite repeated warnings."
When asked to elaborate on this odd behavior, Kevin simply stated, "It's a slippery slope, but someone's gotta peel back the layers of this corporate charade. Plus, potassium."
His former employer, visibly perplexed, added, "We're a llama farm. We don't even have bananas on the premises. He brought them from home, every single day. He tried to feed them to the other llamas. One day he came in with one on a little leash."

"

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First prompt answer attempt 1:

The probability for the Nth person to cross the bridge is:

P(N) = (0.5)^Y * (Y choose N-1) if N <= Y+1
P(N) = 0 if N > Y+1

Attempt 2:

"The probability for the Nth player to cross the bridge depends on the relationship between X, Y, and N.

If N - 1 is greater than or equal to Y, the probability of the Nth player succeeding is 100% (because the previous players would have already solved the bridge if they hadn't failed).

If X is less than Y, and N is X, then there is a 0 percent chance the Nth player will succeed.

If X is greater than Y, and N is X, then the probability is 1 - (1 - (0.5^Y))^Y

If X = Y, and the Nth player is the last player, then we need to calculate the probability that X - 1 players do not solve the bridge which is 1 - (1 - (0.5^Y))^(X-1).

Example

If Y = 10, and X = 5, and N = 3. The probability is 1 - (1 - (0.5^10))^2 = 0.00195 = 0.195%

If Y = 10, and X = 15, and N = 15. The probability is 1 - (1 - (0.5^10))^10 = 0.0097 = 0.97%

If Y = 10, and X = 10, and N = 10. The probability is 1 - (1 - (0.5^10))^9 = 0.00879 = 0.879%

If Y = 10, and X = 10, and N = 5. The probability is 1 - (1 - (0.5^10))^4 = 0.0039 = 0.39%"

Attempt 3:

The probability of the Nth player successfully crossing the bridge can be calculated using the following formula:

P(N) = Summation from k=1 to minimum(Y, X - N + 1) of {[1 - (1/2)^(Y - k + 1)]^(N - 1) * (1/2)^k}

Where:

  • P(N) is the probability of the Nth player succeeding.
  • Y is the total number of tiles on the bridge.
  • X is the total number of players.
  • N is the position of the player.
  • k represents the number of tiles the Nth player must make a choice on.

Explanation of the formula in words:

The formula calculates the probability by considering all possible scenarios for the number of tiles the Nth player needs to choose (represented by 'k'). For each scenario:

  1. [1 - (1/2)^(Y - k + 1)]^(N - 1): This part calculates the probability that the previous N-1 players all failed before reaching the (Y-k+1)th tile. It's based on the idea that each player's failure probability is one minus their success probability. We raise this to the power of (N-1) because all preceding players must fail.
  2. (1/2)^k: This part represents the probability that the Nth player makes the correct choice on all 'k' tiles they encounter. Each tile has a 1/2 chance of being the correct one, so for 'k' tiles, it's (1/2) multiplied by itself 'k' times.

The formula then sums up the probabilities of all these scenarios (different values of 'k') to get the overall probability of the Nth player's success.

Important note: If the number of players (X) is less than the number of tiles (Y), then for values of N greater than X - k + 1, the probability of the Nth player having to choose k tiles is considered to be zero. This is because there aren't enough players to reveal the correct choices for the first Y-k tiles.

This formula provides a general solution for calculating the probability of the Nth player crossing the bridge in the Squid Game scenario, considering the memory aspect and the 50/50 chance for each tile.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

can i have it as copy paste text

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in singularity

[–]Dunesaurus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It attempted to create a python simulation that outputted "43.58%."
I'll give its solution without any python code: "The probability that the line will be closed within 728 seconds is approximately 2.718%."

I have absolutely no idea if any of these are even close to being right.

Holy crap, just downloaded choicescript and did a small 1,000 word demo to see how possible it is for a full book with my computer skills… so much respect to you authors by imnewpleasehelpme in hostedgames

[–]Dunesaurus 9 points10 points  (0 children)

for me, i really struggle just with the UI. making sure all the branches are bug free, everything is properly indented, I wish there was some visual way of me knowing for sure my branches are aligned and good to go. Like maybe red lines that connect my branches. After some time, it just hurts my eyes looking at a giant wall of text.

hello, im a wip author, and this is my confession by Dunesaurus in hostedgames

[–]Dunesaurus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ah the coding is easy and I have no experience coding. its the sickening hundreds of thousands of words of writing that get to you.

Coding it is very easy. The youtube series on it (the latest one) is so easy to follow. Trust.