The use of computers is not limited to laboratories. Seeing their usefulness in everyday life, technology experts are eager to use their artificial intelligence in creative activities like literature.
The 'story' between robots and humans
Writer Daniel Kellman used to write a story with the help of a robot. He also realized the possibilities and the dangers as well. Last year, German-Austrian novelist and dramatist Daniel Kellmann began work on one of his stories. The opening lines were something like this: "I was looking for an apartment. But the talk was not being made."
His writing author CTRL from the bottomless depths of cloud computing carried the story further, "Brother you are strong-jigger, what are you afraid of." Apparently, the brain of the computer was reading the storyline in this way.
To keep the story on track, Kellman wrote, "It is true but the thing is going on about the apartment ..." Just writing that the computer was 'flare up' and the article alliances sat down.
Robo-Writer Features and Drawbacks
Kellman, in his first address to the 'Stuttgart Lecture on the Future', spoke of his experiences associated with mechanical prose. Under this new lecture series, personalities related to science, culture and politics present their perspective about the future.
His "My Algorithm and I" speech is now published as a book. In it, Kelman recalled in one of his visits to Silicon Valley in February the authoritative experiences through AI. There he met the robo-writer, CTRL and its producer Brian McCann.
Kelman does not consider this experience of story writing to be a failure because many beautiful random literary pieces came out through it. But the AI fails to create the plot or character of the story. Kellman considers this a confusing 'secondary user' of human written text. In a meaningful and pithy style, Kelman explains his experience that this problem-solving thing is so far away from the feeling and feeling that everything seems completely empty.
Scene of Story written By ROBO
How effective is the play written by robots
The virtual premiere of the AI drama was livestreamed in February at the Swanda Theater in Prague. A robot writes a play. It has been created by a group of linguists working with computer and theater experts. Artificial Intelligence wrote 90 percent of the play.
In this case too, the plot of the play has some very twisted twist but the algorithm has no such thing as unconscious or else, according to Kelman, he extracts a cryptic statement from the depths of his non-unconscious: "Through me you Be aware of the secrets of acting. But I do not know if I have any desire to tell you this secret. "