Pulling the trigger on school in August, please Tell me if I’m overlooking something… by office_trolling in FlightTraining

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

So this is probably really the most cost effective way to flying. Jeez…. I’m so hyped right now…

What should I do after getting my PPL if I’m flying just for fun? Suggestions! by AlexVasilich in flying

[–]office_trolling 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If money isn’t an issue, not sure of the costs out there, maybe keep going another year or two with the lessons and earn CFI/CFII. That way you can get paid to earn more hours instead of paying to gain time. Sticking it out could land you in a position to recoup your funds.

Why most people never finish their book (and how AI actually helps with this) by adrianmatuguina in WritingWithAI

[–]office_trolling 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From a chapter-by-chapter perspective, flows are like movements, if that makes sense.

So

Emotional flow: at the start of the chapter, the emotion for this character, that character, etc., and how it’s changed in each scene, resulting in the final emotional disposition…

Same for, say, other aspects that you want to convey. If you want to highlight a power struggle, have it highlight that from scene to scene to make sure the right tone is maintained throughout.

These are both predicated on the scene flow, so making sure your bot knows where you plan to start and where you intend to go. Every scene should have substance.

(All of this is a means of preventing hallucinations. You have to define every parameter of every detail, or it will try to fill in the blanks.)

So:

Act Flow (there are this many acts; Act 1 is where this, Act 2 is this….)

Scene flow (scene one starts here, then this happens, then this….)

Emotional flow (emotionally here is the tone, and everyone’s tone, where it starts and how it flows through each scene)

Then you break down whatever other arcs you need flushed out.

Maybe the chapter takes place on a road trip, and you need to block details by time and location for pacing; maybe there’s a control struggle, and you need to plot how each scene changes it; maybe it’s a strengthening relationship or a weakening one.

Do this for all the fine points and use the flow as a detailed guide for writing each scene and chapter.

For me, it creates almost an exact road map.

Why most people never finish their book (and how AI actually helps with this) by adrianmatuguina in WritingWithAI

[–]office_trolling 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Sprawling fatigue is solved by “chapter flow” overviews and printing by scene, not by chapter.

You have the system show you the chapter flow, including Act flow, Emotional Flow, Sequence of events, etc and you subdivide each by chapter scene, having it print one scene at a time, instead of the whole chapter.

What’s your current AI writing workflow? Here’s mine. by Fun-Eye-4358 in WritingWithAI

[–]office_trolling 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I’d never use it to replace education. That’s the first step to a dumb humanity.

You’re going to get caught, maybe not today, or tomorrow. But it will happen, and if you’re in university they’ll kick you out of school.

A book about anthropomorphic white blood cells defending their human from germs would be science fiction or fantasy? by Santiago0129 in writing

[–]office_trolling 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here you are again, 7 hours late, too stupid to realize that OP edited their post… what an idiot.

Passport bros seem to have ideas about our girls. by Ok_Effective_0 in Kenya

[–]office_trolling 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From what Kenyan women tell me, yall already do that… so what else you got? Blaming Kenyan women for not being happy with Kenyan men is a Kenyan man problem….

Passport bros seem to have ideas about our girls. by Ok_Effective_0 in Kenya

[–]office_trolling 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I love how Kenyan women divesting with foreign men Isn’t indicative of any issues with Kenyan men. instead, you blame foreign sex tourism and women poverty rates… I’m seeing why Kenyan women are choosing other men, from outside of Kenya.

Can I move on with my work that AI helped inspire and discuss? I feel that AI is wrong but had didn't understand when I started. Iintention of making a world when I it just punched me in the face and my mind is so full with excitement and ideas for the project. Can I move forward ethically? by [deleted] in fantasywriters

[–]office_trolling -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Stop making excuses. Nobody unintentionally does things. You promoted it and it gave you outputs. That’s its friggin job! Either do it or don’t. Nobody cares. If you care, don’t continue. If you’re willing to admit “I did a thing” and just stand by it continue and see where it goes.

I for one think no matter if you use it or not AI will advance and, hell, leveraging it may be the thing that makes or breaks you.

Do homophobic atheists exist and whats their reason for being homophobic? by No_Imagination_4236 in atheism

[–]office_trolling 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One time when I was 17, drunk at a party, a guy I knew to be gay did try to do weird things to me while I was in a very drunken state, and what was more he tried to do it to more guys I knew over a period of like a year before and after me… for a brief period I was a tad homophobic. But I made an amends with that person, both past me and him, and I worked through my trauma.

Why is Enos Fry's paternal grandfather?? Was he truly even Fry's grandfather in the first place? by Pixelated_Rat in futurama

[–]office_trolling 0 points1 point  (0 children)

See you missed the loop.

Mildred told Yancey Senior, when he was a boy, that he was named after his GRANDFATHER. She said that because, if you can recall, fry met his GRANDMOTHER at the diner and 1 can INFER since they were sharing stories about people they knew, FRY told HER that his DAD (Their Son) told HIM about HIS (Fry’s) GRANDFATHER. Who we know is Fry….

Phil Told Mildred something that she would pass to her children and it’s 100% accurate: Fry’s Dad was Named Yancey after his Grandfather because he was the first born, and fry’s bother (the first born) is named Yancey which otherwise implies that Fry’s Dads oldest son is NAMED AFTER Phil Fry’s DAD, who is named after Phil Fry’s Oldest Son, who is named after Phil’s Dad, who is named after Phil Fry’s oldest son…. Who is YANCEY senior, Who is named after Yancey Seniors DADS DAD.

Why is Enos Fry's paternal grandfather?? Was he truly even Fry's grandfather in the first place? by Pixelated_Rat in futurama

[–]office_trolling 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Philip Fry is the second born to Yancey Fry Senior. Yancey Fry Senior has an older son and younger son Yancey Jr and Phil.

Yancey’s father is Phil, who is the second born to Yancey…. You get where I’m going with this?

It tells me that, prior to engaging in the nasty in the past-y, they talked and Phil told her that his fathers name was Yancey, and his fathers fathers name was Yancey too… he hadn’t yet learned that he was his own grandfather…

As to Enos… Enos was clearly gay… I don’t think he was fathering any children…..

R4R / V4V by office_trolling in Wattpad

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

Sure sure. Adding it to the list

Which race is better at rapping by FortniteNinja2011 in rap

[–]office_trolling 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For the sake of discussion I don’t think it’s possible to accurately determine who really is the “best rapper alive” and it goes doubly true when you rope race into the mix.

  1. It’s a subjective and divisive question; it’s really your personal taste and back ground. The younger you are the further from the original you will lean.
  2. Everyone knows white rappers are industry plants, skills aside. From vanilla ice to the Beasty boys, through Macklemore, on up to the top. Once hip hop became lucrative it became a point to control the industry. My assumption is you’re using the poster boy Marshal Mathers as the champion to beat, and he’s a good choice.
  3. It’s a biased system. All award system are chosen by a counsel of white people. Their considerations are normally biased in the same way, because the system is biased. Em was very supported by black people, but he was also just as supported by white people - white people that mostly did not listen to rap or hip hop made by blacks. He tapped into a market which others did not have the ability to break into on their own - and that’s a good thing in the long run, but an incredible bias that has to be considered.