Tony Laidig – Deep Dive AI Writing Lab Bundle | 8.81 GB
Tony Laidig What You Get?
“Write Limitless, Original Books and Articles Using an Emerging AI-Technology SO Powerful, It Had to Be Approved By Congress!
ZERO Writing Skills? No Problem!
Module 1: People, Prompts & Plots
Every story, whether fiction or non-fiction, needs a starting point. And while you can certainly create those yourself, there are ALSO fun ways to generate ideas you may not have considered!
Module 2: Generating Text Using AI
This is where to REAL fun begins! In Module 2 we will dive deep into 3 different AI writing programs to see how each one works and how they can best serve you in your writing endeavors.
Module 3: Fine-Tuning Your Results
As you would correctly imagine, while AI generated text is often really good, it also gets things wrong at times. We will look at multiple ways to update your results using some cool tech and common sense!
Here Are a Few Examples of AI-Generated Text.
Here Are 4 Examples of AI-Generated Text From My Own Experimenting!
Example 1
“We will never be the same,” said the young man who knew the secrets of the universe, who knew the stars as well as he knew his own name.
“But I don’t think we’re ever going to be the same,” said the old man.
In that moment, we all knew that it was time to go. We gathered our belongings together and left this world behind.
The wind howled and the moonlight danced as we all climbed aboard the ship.
As we rounded the horizon and flew into the night, the stars glimmered and the black of the space was upon us.
The ship rocked and tossed as we went into the night sky. I thought to myself, as my body trembled with every movement. “Is a dream.?”
The stars danced in the night sky when, all of a sudden, my world ended.
I found myself in a black void that wasn’t just the void I was in before. I could sense everything around me, but it wasn’t in any way like how I knew it was supposed to feel. There was nothing in front of me. There was nothing behind me. Nothing. Everything felt empty, and I was just sitting there. The void didn’t move, no matter how hard I tried to shake it. I felt a weight on my head. It was a strange feeling as if a light was going off above me, and I was just in the darkness waiting to be illuminated.
And then it happened. The darkness opened up. And I was HERE.
Example 2
When we think about life on earth in the distant past, we often think of the dinosaurs that ruled the day. However, this new discovery by a team of French and American palaeontologists has revealed that the first humans to live on the planet actually were part of a much more ancient community of early humans than previously known. According to a report in the Daily Mail, the fossils of the so-called “Homo floresiensis” (pronounced “flairs”) have been unearthed in the Altai Mountains of central Asia. They date back around 3.2 million years.
What’s more, they show that Homo floresiensis was at least as advanced technologically as our own species. “We didn’t know the true population size of our direct ancestors, because it was so small and we didn’t have the technology to extract fossils. If we had, we could tell them apart from the living things on the planet today,” says David Siegel, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Arizona and lead author of the study. The research, funded by the National Science Foundation, is detailed today in the journal Science Advances.
The study looked at what evolutionary biologists call “mitochondrial genomes”—the DNA inside cells’ organelles. Mitochondria are the battery that stores the energy and genetic information of a cell and provides energy for the cells’ many other functions. The researchers had previously found that people living today have two types of mitochondria.
While people living in the Amazon are a mix of these two types, they have two more mitochondria than people living in Europe or the United States, which may help explain why they live longer. While it isn’t clear how this relates to longevity, the study points out the importance of mitochondria to health.