You didn't write that. Oh yes AI did!
Don't you notice it when a piece of writing suddenly shows itself up as being AI generated? I think we all do, and it kinda hacks me off. If someone uses AI to help draft a post, an article or a form, they should make sure to completely "humanise" the result. Or create an instruction set to ensure that the AI will "Do the thing" the way that "the writer" would do it. As Michael mentioned in the Village a few weeks back, the language of the LLMs derives in part from classic books and scholarly papers. So, AI "utilises" things that we would "use" and chooses an em dash, etc. As Churchill said, âShort words are best, and the old words when short are best of all.â When I asked ChatGPT about this, they agreed and offered up a nice corollary from Strunk and White. âAvoid fancy words. Do not be tempted by a twenty-dollar word when there is a ten-center handy, ready, and able.â Of course, being ChatGPT, they provided several more quotes ranging from Mark Twain to George Orwell and offered me versions "in my own Santa voice". Here they are: 1. Warm & Wise (LinkedIn-style) đ
âSantaâs tip for clearer talk: short, everyday words carry more weight than long, fancy ones. Keep it simple, keep it kind.â 2. Playful & Light (X/Twitter-style) đ
âSanta says: skip the sesquipedalian spectacles. Short words sparkle brighter.â 3. Family-Friendly (Instagram-style) đ
⨠âBig words donât make big magic. Small, simple ones do. Ho ho ho!â 4. S.A.N.T.A. Tie-in (for business posts) đ
âShow Appreciation with simple words. A thank-you said plainly shines brighter than a speech stuffed with syllables.â I am ridiculously fond of "Santa says: skip the sesquipedalian spectacles."