http://iwl.me/
Based off of 10 random writings, I almost always got called H P Lovecraft.
You?
"As in a kaleidoscope, the constellation of forces operating in the system as a whole is ever changing." - Ludwig Lachmann
"When A Man Dies A World Goes Out of Existence" - GLS Shackle
Also, in case you're wondering,
I did not test original authors vs this machine.
I wonder how this even works...(just a random writer is selected each time)
It gave me Edgar Allen Poe, HP Lovecraft, and Ian Fleming.
Interesting. I tried several pieces of writing and got mostly different results. However, I tried three separate excerpts from one short story I wrote (my favorite one) and got Chuck Palahniuk all three times. I've never read him, so I don't know if that's accurate.
That's good it noticed a consistency in the short story. Did you use different "genres" with all the sampling?
Maybe you should just stick to one type of genre (essay, story, poetry, etc)?
As far as how the damn thing works I have no clue - I couldnt find the formula
Out of 10 samples:
Make of it what you will.
I ran all my blog entries through it and came out as follows:
David Foster Wallace x6
HP Lovecraft x16
George Orwell
Stephen King
Edgar Allan Poe x3
Dan Brown (nooooooo!!!!!)
Margaret Atwood
William Gibson
JK Rowling
Cory Doctorow x2
It seems like I'm like Lovecraft like you Vive. Not sure who David Foster Wallace is though.
The atoms tell the atoms so, for I never was or will but atoms forevermore be.
Yours sincerely,
Physiocrat
Oh shit, I'm already stoked on this. Out of 19 non free verse poems I got: Dan Brown x3 David Foster Wallace x3 James Joyce x 2 Douglas Adams Jonathan Swift Arthur Clarke H.P. Lovecraft Cory Doctorow Vladimir Nabokov James Fenimore Cooper George Orwell Mary Shelley H.G. Wells J. R. R. Tolkien (I think I only received this because it mentioned runes)
For my short stories and other writing: David Foster Wallace x2 H. P. Lovecraft x2 (in regards to writing about noise/industrial music) Arthur Clarke William Shakespeare Ian Fleming Cory Doctorow Dan Brown
For something a bit more interesting, my deam records: Ursula K. Le Guin x5 (4 on dreams, 1 on writing about dream analysis) Dan Brown x4 H. P. Lovecraft x3 William Gibson x3 Chuck Palahniuk x2 Stephen King David Foster Wallace Rudyard Kipling Bram Stoker J.D. Salinger Top writers: Dan Brown x8 David Foster Wallace x6 H. P. Lovecraft x6 Ursula K. Le Guin x5 William Gibson x3 James Joyce x2
Thing is I actually don't read much non fiction, so I'm only familiar with Lovecraft and James Joyce on this.
Edit: Just looked them up. Dan Brown - r u srs? David Foster Wallace - I'm interested. His first novel The Broom of the System had this on it's Wiki page, "A recurring concept in The Broom of the System is psychology as relating to words, and many of the theories discussed involve Ludwig Wittgenstein's ideas and principles."
Ursula K. Le Guin - I can see why, but again I don't ever read non fiction, but it makes sense a fantasy/sci-fi author would pop up (bit surprised Lovecraft didn't appear more for my dream records).
That's good it noticed a consistency in the short story. Did you use different "genres" with all the sampling? Maybe you should just stick to one type of genre (essay, story, poetry, etc)?
Yeah, I would think my style differs depending on genre. However, I tried other short stories and got Dan Brown, Stephen King, and Raymond Chandler. I tend to think of my fictional writing as fairly consistent stylistically, so I don't know.
Seem rather random or if anything mistaken. I can assure you my writing is no where near as good as Edgar Allan Poe or George Orwell.