Check out my recent full-GPT-4 generated HN parody as well:<p><a href="https://crackernews.github.io" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://crackernews.github.io</a><p>(featuring coherent comment threads!)<p><i>P.S. the prompts and the code I used can be found here: <a href="https://github.com/crackernews/crackernews.github.io/blob/gh-pages/generate.py">https://github.com/crackernews/crackernews.github.io/blob/gh...</a></i>
I built `This Hackernews Does Not Exist` which is similar to this:<p><a href="https://coxomb.github.io/This-Hacker-News-Does-Not-Exist/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://coxomb.github.io/This-Hacker-News-Does-Not-Exist/</a><p>HN comments:<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33845946">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33845946</a>
Nice to see a fun, creative project like this. The LLM tie-in makes sense because it keeps headlines fresh & relevant to today's news. Thanks for sharing!<p>If anyone else wants a peek behind the curtain, here is the GPT-4 call: <a href="https://github.com/johnpolacek/notyetnews/blob/main/cron/openai/generateParody.ts">https://github.com/johnpolacek/notyetnews/blob/main/cron/ope...</a>
I think the year 2122 will be closer to Dune than any of these more optimistic articles. Or maybe Fahrenheit 451 if we don’t totally screw up the environment, with a dose of Harrison Bergeron.
very funny. But "NEW YORK - The year is 2122 and the fight for clean energy has taken an unexpected, yet entertaining turn." Shouldn't it read as a current news article writen in 2122? I wouldn't say "The year is 2023 and" today.
For a more present-oriented, yet archaic in its delivery, news coverage I recommend the Medieval Content Farm: <a href="https://tidings.potato.horse" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://tidings.potato.horse</a>
It seems like something is wrong with the links, at least on my machine. If I click the summary of the top article, I get linked to the second article. Clicking on the second article leads me to the third article, and so on.
This one is actually quite hopeful! <a href="https://www.notyet.news/news/2023-08-13/1" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.notyet.news/news/2023-08-13/1</a>
> Why a Basic Algorithm Garnered Unprecedented Support from Quantum-Net Billionaires<p>> In an absurd twist of events, the quantum-net community is perplexed by the curious case of AI-RH1002 – an unremarkable algorithm sowing division in a universally united world. Like many divisive codes before it, AI-RH1002 seems to have won the backing of quantum-net billionaires.<p>Very funny site idea! This snippet reminds me of Ian M. Banks novels about the Culture.