So, nope. I'm not going to use the Type AI to help me write my books. It has proven to be a bit of a pain in the butt to be honest. There is another program called Sakura that I used for the other books, a couple of them anyway. It wasn't as expensive, and it did exactly what I needed it to do. I only asked it for help, not to write the book. With Type AI, I thought I would have a bit of fun and let it write an entire book for me to read after I gave it very specific instructions about what I wanted the book to be about. It did not do what I asked.
First, (and this is my fault), I wrote out the instructions for what I wanted, and in doing so, realized I had been too vague. I gave the AI the overall skeleton of what I thought the book should be: fill in the blanks with all the character development, situations, circumstances, plot, and everything, but it was at least supposed to follow my instructions. It did not.
What I got was a 45,000-word document with holes, a repeated narrative, situations I specifically said I didn't want, and it just rambled on and on without following the line or keeping to the basic plot I gave it. When I asked for more and for corrections, it only got worse. The whole book was scrapped, and I asked it to start over. I was again, very specific about the characters not falling in love, not getting married, not having children -- but there we were, six or seven years into their story, and they're celebrating their 5th wedding anniversary with twins and another baby on the way.
I wrote into the instructions for the AI to scrap the book again, to pay attention to the details I set out for it, and what I got this time was stranger still. It had many block corrections, a color-coded narrative, footnotes, and more. This is a novel, not an essay! It wrote another 37,000 words and asked me if it needed to be more detailed—well, since I want an 85,000-word document—YES!
I'm going to write to the company and ask for my money back. I don't know if I'll get it, but I am going to ask. I am truly disappointed in the thing—it was supposed to be fun, but like the bread maker, it was frustrating and anything but enjoyable. I'll just write the damn book myself and be done with it. I don't mind, I write all my books, but this one was supposed to be different -- and it was, I suppose. It was a complete disaster.
I can use Sakura for flavor and color -and that's all I really need AI for anyway - it's just if you go into a restaurant where you can order what you want off the menu and ask the chef to prepare it just the way you want it, and they bring you out a dish that (a) you didn't order (b) was not anything like what you ordered, you shouldn't be expected to pay for it. I hope they will give me my money back. At least I learned a little about using AI.
I have to laugh at one thing. My main characters are Bindy Vance and Marley Knox, a man and a woman. After writing over 37,000 words, and about to have the two people getting engaged and married, the machine decides to ask me if Marley is a man or a woman - it wrote the book as if Marley was female! NO...he's a man!! In my instructions, I say he, he, he, and for the AI to ask me what gender he is, just stopped me. I wanted to kick it, but you can't - I mean, if you did, you'd hurt your foot.
This week has been a week for learning, I can tell you that. I'm dealing with another personal issue that needs to be settled, but that's a God thing. He can handle that one. I'm not sure I'll bother Him with the AI issue—I can just ditch it and move forward. There are too many other options to worry about it. The bread maker issue, which left me with enough bread to make 5 or 6 big batches of bread pudding, is enough to deal with. I mean, I have no doubt what will actually happen is the birds will feast - and I'll just wash my hands of the fantasy of being a bread maker! (Even AI couldn't mess up as badly as I did)
Photo Credit: HTX.Gov.SG



