"Lift on three, one two three" is better than "three two one" because you don't know if you lift on one or if its "three two one lift" and lift on lift.
Not because I was bad at it, but because I signed up for statistics and passed the test they made you do for it and everything and they PUT ME IN ALGEBRA 2 LITERALLY NEXT DOOR AT THE SAME PERIOD AND UGHHHHHH BORING AND SUCKY
Stats came in one time, asked 2 questions, someone cheered about being right, and they left laughing. I don't think a single kid in alg2 didn't hate math that semester
What I'm waiting to see is how this screws everyone who hated Highschool lit and writing now that prompt engineering has made clear communication skills a VERY important skill to develop for most office work environments.
Yes even for people who's jobs don't involve talking to other people aside from co-workers.
Okay you have lost me. How does prompt engineering make communication skills more important? More importantly what do real world communication skills actually have to do with learning shakespeare or any of the other stuff I did in secondary school English.
It doesn't. There's no connection between highschool lit and this
Prompt: a grand scene of roller skating race of TRON, Hatsune Miku in TRON style black tight-fitting sportswear and roller skates with high-speed glowing small wheels, rushing in a lively music game style road with colorful glowing patterns, the sportswear and roller skates covered with glowing bright patterns, colorful cyberpunk city in blurred background, hand, (full body:2), perfect face, wind, bokeh, night, 70mm IMAX action film lora:detailed_hands:1lora:FF_Style_-_James_v232:1 <lora:Cyber Wb FFusion:0.5>
Negative prompt: face out of frame, cropped, partial, bust portrait, skirt, glowing eyes, make up, 2D, painting, figurine, runner, text, ball, balloon, stationary wheels, (deformed:2), nsfw
apart from building a vocabulary and being exposed to important works of art. Certainly not communication skills.