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- Xref: sparky comp.ai:5105 rec.arts.books:26629 misc.writing:4360 rec.arts.int-fiction:1321
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!olivea!gossip.pyramid.com!pyramid!pyramid.COM!kathyj
- From: kathyj@pyramid.COM (Kathy Johnson )
- Newsgroups: comp.ai,rec.arts.books,misc.writing,rec.arts.int-fiction
- Subject: Re: Computer writes a book? WHY?
- Message-ID: <185181@pyramid.pyramid.com>
- Date: 28 Jan 93 22:29:19 GMT
- References: <1993Jan25.163029.1901@seas.smu.edu> <kxp36!l@rpi.edu> <1k56lgINNc5q@shelley.u.washington.edu> <1993Jan27.151317.2997@seas.smu.edu> <C1KLvK.913@unx.sas.com>
- Sender: news@pyramid.pyramid.com
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: Pyramid Technology Corporation, Mountain View, California
- Lines: 13
-
- In article <C1KLvK.913@unx.sas.com>, sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com (Fred Welden) writes:
- |>
-
- |>
- |> So you've added authors to the list of folks who might have good reasons
- |> to create a program that writes books. The question I asked (and I
- |> can't tell from your headers whether you're responding to me or not) was
- |> why would PUBLISHERS want such a thing?
- |>
- |> --
- |> --Fred, or another blind 8th-century BC | sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com
- |> Hellenic poet of the same name. |
- So they could replace their staff writers with it? 8-)
-