points by threecheese 5 days ago

I follow the same strategy, but loosely - I need those emdashes to signal that I’m using the tools.

nytesky 4 days ago

I actually regularly used emdashes in my writing —- my kids complain I write like AI in fact — and now I have to consciously remove them.

Likewise, I often used literary flourish and pleasantries like that above article about email decompression; I’m from the south so I think structured formality comes with territory.

I do think using LLM to turn notes and bullets into narratives should be considered no different than rendering CSV text into an excel format, just making it more digestible by recipient.

rdtsc 5 days ago

That’s my latest joke — that we’ll have to pretend like we used the tools so they can feel validated they’ve spent all this money on hyped up technology. So, yes, it’s em-dashes and “it’s not just this, it’s that …” so they can hopefully leave us alone.

  • xp84 5 days ago

    I remember feeling embarrassed one time that I used a very early GPT thing to help organize perf reviews for employees from the various bullet points I had written for each (I had a lot of direct reports). But in current world, I assume I’d be praised for doing so.