Content pfp
Content
@
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

kbc pfp
kbc
@kbc
Where does ai come in in your writing? How do you collaborate with it (if at all)?
3 replies
0 recast
0 reaction

Christina BorrowLucid | Chones pfp
Christina BorrowLucid | Chones
@borrowlucid.eth
if its boring, i ask the robot to do it
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

Tom Beck pfp
Tom Beck
@tombeck.eth
I've found it works best in the following roles: coach, beta reader, and publicist. As a coach, it's good for strategic discussions about career, helping me work through mental blocks and anxieties, processing rejections, analyzing my work to identify patterns and themes, etc. As a beta reader, it gives candid feedback on drafts—what's working, what isn't. What to focus on in revision. Helps me find that "sweet spot" where a piece is polished but not "over-edited." As a publicist, it writes all the annoying "extra" stuff: cover letters, bios, summaries, promotional posts, author website copy, etc. It also reads my work and suggests venues that might be a good fit.
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

GENUINE JACK pfp
GENUINE JACK
@genuinejack
I've always been a 'write a great outline before you start' kind of person and I do so still, now with the context of the request for AI. The result from AI is always the best *first* draft, which I then work through and refine until it's what I had in mind when starting.
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction