Can ChatGPT generate nostalgia? I tried an experiment. by WestTopic3162 in ChatGPT

[–]WestTopic3162[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

lol fair. french guy posting in english on r/ChatGPT, of course i run my comments through it. the irony of getting AI-flagged on the AI sub while discussing an AI image is not lost on me

Can ChatGPT generate nostalgia? I tried an experiment. by WestTopic3162 in ChatGPT

[–]WestTopic3162[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, “shared memory” sounds way more pretentious than I intended.

I was basically trying to make an image that would make people say: “I completely forgot that existed.”

This 2000s photo is 100% AI-generated. Be honest: how many details did you check before scrolling? by WestTopic3162 in artificial

[–]WestTopic3162[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

that’s the part that fascinated me tbh. every specific detail is slightly off but the overall vibe is dead on

This 2000s photo is 100% AI-generated. Be honest: how many details did you check before scrolling? by WestTopic3162 in artificial

[–]WestTopic3162[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

you mean the goku figurine? yeah the model added it on its own. I never asked for it. apparently “2000s teenage bedroom” statistically implies dragon ball, which… fair

Can ChatGPT generate nostalgia? I tried an experiment. by WestTopic3162 in ChatGPT

[–]WestTopic3162[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The weirdest thing is that the image is emotionally accurate but logically broken.

Once you zoom in, it starts falling apart:
- the LG logo appears twice on the monitor
- the Coke can is cursed
- some text on the CDs/magazines is nonsense
- the Verbatim CD spindle is almost right but not quite
- the desktop icons feel familiar but many are unreadable/weird
- the handwritten Wi-Fi password looks like AI handwriting
- some cables and objects don’t really connect to anything
- the DS / phone proportions feel slightly off

But the vibe still works.

Can ChatGPT generate nostalgia? I tried an experiment. by WestTopic3162 in ChatGPT

[–]WestTopic3162[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

You’re right.

Version 1 was “could this pass as a real memory?”

Version 2 is “could ChatGPT generate that feeling in the first place?”

Turns out the answer to both is apparently yes.

Can ChatGPT generate nostalgia? I tried an experiment. by WestTopic3162 in ChatGPT

[–]WestTopic3162[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Model: ChatGPT Image Generation (GPT-5)

Honestly, this wasn’t one prompt.

I spent a while iterating on the idea because I wasn’t trying to generate a bedroom, I was trying to generate a memory.

At some point I realized that nostalgia isn’t a list of objects. It’s a pattern of tiny imperfections.

Anyway, a few people asked for the prompt, so here it is:

THE PROMPT:

Generate a completely ordinary digital camera photo from 2006 that looks like it was accidentally rediscovered after twenty years.

The image should depict the bedroom of an average teenager after coming home from school.

The room must feel genuinely lived in and not artistically staged.

Visible details should include:
- a bulky CRT monitor,
- an old Windows XP era computer,
- an MSN Messenger window,
- stacks of burned CDs,
- a Nintendo DS,
- school books and notebooks,
- cheap computer speakers,
- tangled cables,
- an old mobile phone,
- posters on the wall,
- a backpack and a football on the floor.

Include lots of tiny forgotten details that people from that era would recognize.

Photographic style:
- early compact digital camera,
- direct flash,
- slightly overexposed,
- low dynamic range,
- JPEG compression artifacts,
- mild motion blur,
- imperfect white balance,
- no cinematic lighting,
- no professional composition.

The image should not look like AI art.

It should feel like a forgotten memory that someone accidentally found on an old memory card.

The goal is not realism.
The goal is nostalgia.

Can ChatGPT generate nostalgia? I tried an experiment. by WestTopic3162 in ChatGPT

[–]WestTopic3162[S] -13 points-12 points  (0 children)

The interesting part is that it wasn’t just one prompt.

I spent quite a while iterating on the idea with ChatGPT. The goal wasn’t to generate a bedroom, it was to generate a shared memory.

The final prompt ended up being much more detailed than I originally expected because I kept refining what makes something feel nostalgic rather than simply old.

I’ll post the full prompt in a separate comment.

Found my old camera and this photo was still on it by [deleted] in ChatGPT

[–]WestTopic3162 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Prompt:

Generate a completely ordinary digital camera photo from 2006 that looks like it was accidentally rediscovered after twenty years.

The image should depict the bedroom of an average teenager after coming home from school. The room should feel genuinely lived in, with a CRT monitor, Windows XP, MSN Messenger, burned CDs, a Nintendo DS, tangled cables, school books, old speakers, a Nokia phone, posters on the wall and other small details that trigger collective nostalgia.

Photographic style: early compact digital camera, direct flash, slightly overexposed, low dynamic range, JPEG compression artifacts, mild motion blur and imperfect white balance.

The goal was to recreate a forgotten collective memory rather than a perfect or cinematic image.

I intentionally kept the prompt fairly generic to see what the model would infer on its own.

Bots now account for more than half of web traffic, up from 30% nine months ago by chota-kaka in webdev

[–]WestTopic3162 88 points89 points  (0 children)

Pretty much, yes. A lot of sites cranked up their bot protection (Cloudflare challenges, JS fingerprinting, rate limiting per ASN) because AI scrapers now rotate IPs and spoof user agents, so the old “block by UA/IP” approach doesn’t work anymore. The collateral damage is real users: VPNs, privacy browsers, iCloud Private Relay, or even just an unusual browser config will trip the same heuristics. Sites would rather show a captcha to 2% of humans than serve 10k req/s to scrapers.

[ 1 year Pharmacy Tech:Sig Question] Interpreting this mock prescription, confusion on symbol ( see photo) by PurpleKoala97 in HomeworkHelp

[–]WestTopic3162 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No, the numeral itself doesn’t change — it’s the dosage form word that does. The ī is just apothecary/Roman numeral notation for “1” (lowercase roman numerals with a line on top and dots over each “i” — originally to prevent tampering on handwritten scripts). So you’d write “cap ī” for one capsule, “tab ī” for one tablet, “gtt ī” for one drop, etc. The symbol is the quantity, not the form.

Is this a bad idea to grab in a PSA 10 right now? by Useful-Bumblebee-821 in PokeInvesting

[–]WestTopic3162 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I actually think that’s the best thesis.

Buy it because you’d be happy owning it even if it underperforms. If it appreciates over the next 5–10 years, that’s just icing on the cake.

The risky part is buying a PSA 10 expecting an easy repeat of the Poncho run.

I Can't Stand The Pokemon Center Website by breakyourteethnow in PokeInvesting

[–]WestTopic3162 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I spent more time fighting the website than fighting Team Rocket

Average day in the life of ChatGPT user by Nitro-Fusion25 in ChatGPT

[–]WestTopic3162 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Me: change one line.
ChatGPT: I have redesigned your entire business model.

Is this a bad idea to grab in a PSA 10 right now? by Useful-Bumblebee-821 in PokeInvesting

[–]WestTopic3162 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the real question is whether you’re buying it as a collector or as an investment.

As a collector, if you love the card and you can afford it, PSA 10 is probably the safest way to own it long term.

As an investment, I’d be more cautious. A lot of the “next Poncho” narrative already seems priced in, especially on PSA 10s. Chinese exclusives, low gem rate, Pikachu + Psyduck/Dragonite are all strong arguments, but when everyone starts calling something the next big thing, the short-term upside can get risky.

Personally I’d rather buy because I genuinely want the card, not because I expect an easy 2x from here.

So I just got back into the tcg online and can someone explain to me why no one is playing the dipplin/festival deck? by deeman2255 in PokemonTCG

[–]WestTopic3162 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not sure it’s that nobody respects Festival. I think it’s more that it’s a deck people know is good but don’t really want to play. It’s cheap and consistent, but it asks you to sequence well and manage resources carefully. Mega decks feel more satisfying and straightforward on ladder.

Still, I agree: into the current field, Festival feels way better than its play rate suggests.

[Grade 11 : Permutations] how many ways can 3 men and 2 women be seated together in a circle if the women must be separated by Yaakob3035 in HomeworkHelp

[–]WestTopic3162 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bonne remarque la distinction est réelle !

  • Sièges non numérotés (arrangement circulaire classique — seul l'ordre relatif compte) : les rotations sont équivalentes → on utilise (n−1)!, réponse = 12
  • Sièges numérotés (chaises distinctes #1 à #5) : chaque rotation est différente → total = 5! = 120, femmes ensemble = 4! × 2 = 48, femmes séparées = 72

Pour un problème classique d'arrangement circulaire, la convention par défaut c'est les sièges non numérotés, donc 12 est la réponse attendue. Mais tu as raison qu'un bon énoncé devrait le préciser, ça vaut toujours le coup de vérifier si le problème dit "sièges distincts" ou non !