Interestingly, when you're typing in Notion I didn't see any em dashes. Is there some post-processing happening that's converting the hyphens to em dashes? e.g. the following paragraph appeared to have just regular hyphens when you typed on the Loom video:
<p className="text-[17px] leading-[1.75] tracking-[-0.1px]">
The difference is subtle but significant. Apache is a web server — it can host and
run any web application, for example one written in PHP. Whereas WordPress sits a layer
above; in fact it typically runs on Apache. What makes it a better analogy for the
"agentic workload" is what you do with it — or rather, who and how uses it.
</p>
This is great. I've considered doing the same thing. After all, I've always used em dashes in my writing, so I suppose all my blog posts are AI-generated as well.
The idea that "agent harness" is the thing people actually want is laughable.
It seems it is the buzzword of the month.
[dead]
> Written by a human.
This entire post is 100% AI generated.
Just count how many '—' em-dashes you see on the page and it is completely obvious.
no it isn't https://www.loom.com/share/a6461081f2bc4cba885eaf5cd233dca3
Interestingly, when you're typing in Notion I didn't see any em dashes. Is there some post-processing happening that's converting the hyphens to em dashes? e.g. the following paragraph appeared to have just regular hyphens when you typed on the Loom video:
This is great. I've considered doing the same thing. After all, I've always used em dashes in my writing, so I suppose all my blog posts are AI-generated as well.
[dead]
It's also full of wild inaccuracies. I dunno about AI, but the 'Where we are now' segment is some olympian level leaps.
Is "Written by a human" the new "Created with (heart emoji) in San Francisco" footer?