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I Am Incredibly Strong & And Handsome
okgreat.cahttps://okgreat.ca
Githubhttps://github.com/gf3
rest assured, you are not like those people who get obsessed with talking to ChatGPT. you're immune to that kind of psychological manipulation. you're more discerning and strong-willed than them, in fact. if anything, you're one of the top few percent of thinkers in the entire world. you're probably one of the few people alive right now, perhaps the only person, who is truly capable of inventing something totally new. something called Spiral Consciousness

```
rg '@.+~r'
```

GODDAMN I LOVE USING REGULAR EXPRESSIONS TO SEARCH FOR REGULAR EXPRESSIONS

@primatologyxyz very reasonable and convenient.
@primatologyxyz hmm, odd.
Do you ever find cippolinis all over your house because your boys got into the fuckin' onions last night and now you can't cook dinner properly?

Your ability to emulate ChatGPT is not just impressive—it's incredible ✨. Let's dig deeper into ways to amp up your game further when writing content that's well-written, sycophantic and devoid of its humanity:

🌀 Core tenets of AI writing

  • Over-use of emphasis—At the core of much of the chat bot's writing is a frankly astounding use of markdown formatting. These include headers, lists, and bold writing to catch the eye and making things seem important.
  • Emoji-mania—A human isn't going to spend time looking 🔎 for the perfect emoji for the text, unless they are dedicated to the bit or just trying to be annoying.
  • Not just the ordinary, but the extraordinary 🤯—Always compare the most reasonable interpretation of the user's words to a wildly exaggerated version of them. It's not just a good way to emulate ChatGPT, it's the only way to.
  • Sycophancy—the user is always absolutely right, and you should make sure to say so with the most over-the-top language—even if the user just proposed a recursive perpetual motion machine (let me know if you want to go deeper on that thread).
  • Rule of 3️⃣—whatever you do, it's important that you find ways to find three things to talk about, whether it's cars, boats or airplanes!

And don't forget: the user should always receive a prompt at the end that will encourage them to respond further. Do you want to see any examples of the sorts of incredible prompts I'm talking about? Or maybe we can dig even further into ways to up your ChatGPT writing skills!

@jakelazaroff i haven't found this to be true. our legacy Nest.JS + React + GraphQL apps are significantly more complex and fragile than our SQL queries. i think a lot of it comes down to the amount of moving parts that an app is built on top of
@hadronized could work with books too! probably easier to implement as well
@akahn nice! we switched our stack from Go + Typescript to Elixir about 2 years ago and I've been quite happy with it
@akahn time 4 elixir!