Showing posts with label metablogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label metablogging. Show all posts

Aug 17, 2025

The Day the Page Views Changed

Figure 1a. Summer Surge. ~200,000 page views per day for wikifiction.
 Eight months ago I had a blog post called C3 👁 in which I took note of the fact that after 15 years the wikifiction blog had surpassed 1,000,000 page views. Five years ago, in a blog post called 500k Pageviews, I showed 
Figure 2. Free Gemini options.

that there have been some times in the past when this blog got an unusually large number of page views then returned to a more normal level of traffic. There was even a time I recall when some of the unusually large number of page views being reported by Google analytics were eventually retroactively "erased" or rescinded. 

Something changed on August 4th 2025 and in just the past ten days there have been almost 2,000,000 new page views (see Figure 1a).

Figure 1b. End of the surge in wikifiction traffic.
 Update. Towards the end of August, after about three weeks, the increased traffic to this blog ended as suddenly as it had begun (see Figure 1b). Lately, there have been major changes made to various types of Google software such as Whisk and Gemini. For example, see the 2.5 Pro option shown in Figure 2.

Figure 3. Whisk entry page as viewed by Firefox.


Figure 4. Whisk entry page 2.0
 Google tea leaves. I have no idea what has caused this sudden unprecedented increase in wikifiction blog traffic. I have begun to wonder if one of the Large Language Models, possibly Gemini, has recently been given the opportunity to crawl through Blogger blogs. Lately, there have been almost daily changes to the Gemini user interface.

Gemini user options as of August 14th. Inset:
the "+" button options for file uploads to Gemin are shown.
One of the most interesting recent changes to the free version of Gemini was the availability of "2.5 Pro" (see Figure 2). When using this "reasoning" option, Gemini can check its "raw output" against the content of websites, in real time.

Image upload menu.
 Whisk Evolution. Back in April, I blogged about Whisk Animate. More recently, there have been changes to the Whisk user interface. Now, when I launch Whisk, my Firefox browser loads a page that fails to correctly display its embedded Whisk Animate videos (see Figure 3). At the location of each video there are flashed brief views of parts of the videos and large regions of black.

click again
If I then scroll down the page, then the Whisk Animate video examples fall into a new pattern and the videos play correctly on the webpage (see Figure 4). I usually just click on the "enter tool" button and then I see the actual Whisk user interface as is shown below in Figure 5.

As part of Jimmy the Intern's never ending quest to make an annoying user interface, the options for providing Whisk with reference images have all be hidden in the current Whisk user interface. However, if you know to click on the little arrow button, then a menu opens with the image upload options (see the image that is shown to the right.

upload image button
 Click again, sucker. Of course, opening that menu does not allow you to upload a reference image. You have to also click again on a hidden button. And even then, the user is only provided with yet another mysterious icon on yet another button. If the user somehow knows to hover over that button then they finally get to see the upload image button.
Figure 5. Google's Jimmy the Intern™ is the king of user interface white space and hidden user options.

A car named Stacy.
 Shown in Figure 6 (below) is the Gemini user interface in all of its white space glory. I asked Gemini to make an illustration for the science fiction story "The Metamorph Intervention". Gemini continues to sometimes display one image in the user interface while allowing you to download a different (but similar) image. 

Also, Gemini is currently being quite stupid about the text that it inserts into images (see the image to the right), In this case, adding a title and an author that I did not request as well as labeling the woman in the image with her name.

Figure 6. The Gemini user interface. Please sir, I want more white space.

The PDF
 Speaking of stupidity. I had been experimenting with a style of science fiction story-writing collaboration in which I was allowing Claude and Gemini to take turns drafting chapters of the story. However, I was so disappointed with Gemini's (the default 2.5 Flash) performance in drafting Chapter 5 of the story (shown here) that I also gave Claude a chance to make a version of Chapter 5.

In all fairness, I decided to give the "2.5 Pro" Gemini option a try on exactly the same task (see below on this page). I provided Gemini 2.5 Pro with a PDF that had: 1) some backstory information, 2) the full text of Chapters 1 - 4 of "The Metamorph Intervention" and my suggestions for what plot elements should be in Chapter 5 of the story...

MePlans for Chapter 5. Collaborating with Marda, Ovidius crafts a science fiction version of the Daedalus flight/wings story that is both 1) destined to be wildly popular as a play (with actors sailing across the stage on wings) but also 2) offensive to conservative religious authorities (by depicting a god as being a space alien). In this new science fiction story about Daedalus, Daedalus is taken to the spaceship of the pek Overseer, which continuously hovers high over the Aegean. Daedalus learns about the conflict between the pek and the bumpha over the fate of Earth. Daedalus learns about hang gliders and builds one using pek nanites. Daedalus jumps out of the pek spaceship and sails back home.

Gemini, process the file that I just uploaded and then discuss with me our additional plans for crafting Chapter 5 of the science fiction story "The Metamorph Intervention". My intention is that the Gemini LLM will generate a first draft of Chapter 5 of the story. However, Gemini, first share with me any questions or suggestions that you have about the story.

Ovidius: first contact with Manny the bumpha.
 Gemini: Commencing Analysis of Text

I've initiated a thorough analysis of the provided text, focusing on the first four chapters of "The Metamorph Intervention." I'm carefully examining the backstory, character details, and the plans laid out for future chapters, particularly Chapter 5. This will help me gain a comprehensive understanding.

Delving Deeper into Plot

I've further analyzed the text, concentrating on the interplay of backstory, character development, and future plot directions. I'm noting the intricacies of world-building, paying close attention to elements like bumpha, pek, Sed ron Domain, and zeptites. I'm also synthesizing the author's intended themes, especially those related to free will and technological transcendence.

Unpacking Chapter 5 Details

I'm now focusing on the specific "Plans for Chapter 5," dissecting the seven key elements meticulously. My attention is centered on fleshing out the interplay between Ovid and Marda, the mechanics of the Daedalus story within the story, and the intricacies of the pek's technological offering to Daedalus. I'm building a framework to formulate pertinent questions and suggestions for the user, ensuring clarity and enriching the narrative.

Synthesizing Chapter Five Strategy

I'm now fully immersed in the "Plans for Chapter 5," dissecting the seven key elements meticulously to create a strategic outline. I'm focusing on crafting specific questions for the user to clarify areas such as the religious authorities and their impact, Ovid's emotional state as he partners with Marda, and the technical details of the pek nanites. I'm also considering the balance between detail and summarization in the Daedalus story, as well as Marda's active role. This will provide a solid framework for refining the chapter plan.

A subject provided to Whisk.
 Of course. I have processed the file containing the first four chapters of "The Metamorph Intervention" and the detailed backstory and plans. This is a fascinating and complex science fiction narrative, weaving together advanced concepts like time travel, artificial life, and the nature of consciousness with a compelling historical setting. I particularly appreciate the detailed exploration of the bumpha-pek philosophical conflict and Marda's struggle with agency, which aligns with your interests in technologically assisted telepathy and the implications of advanced AI.

Before I proceed to generate a first draft of Chapter 5, I have some questions and suggestions to ensure the chapter aligns perfectly with your vision. This will help us collaboratively refine the direction of the story.

Questions for Clarification:

Ovid's "Madness" and Motivation: In the backstory, you mention the idea that Ovidius might develop a "madness" from his experiences with Manny and Marda. In Chapter 5, as he writes this revolutionary and potentially blasphemous Daedalus story, how should this "madness" manifest? Is it a frenzied, prophetic inspiration that makes him a more brilliant writer? Or is it a paranoid obsession that isolates him from his peers even as his work becomes popular? Understanding his mental and emotional state will be key to portraying his collaboration with Marda.

The "Conservative Religious Authorities": Who, specifically, are these authorities in Augustan Rome? Are we talking about the established state priesthood (the Pontifical College), traditionalist senators who see this new mythology as a threat to Roman values (mos maiorum), or perhaps followers of a specific mystery cult? Defining the opposition will help shape the nature of the conflict and the risks Ovidius and Marda are taking.

The Pek's Role in Daedalus's Story: The plan states Daedalus learns about the pek-bumpha conflict and uses pek nanites to build a hang glider. How does this happen?

  Do the pek intentionally educate Daedalus, perhaps seeing him as a potential pawn against the bumpha's plans? This would seem to violate their own rules about non-interference.

Or does Daedalus cleverly trick the pek or steal the nanites? This would portray him as exceptionally resourceful.

Does the pek Overseer, Kenth, appear in Ovid's story-within-a-story as himself or as a traditional god?

Marda and Korinna's Internal Dynamic: Now that Marda's femtozoan is dominant, how does the original Korinna femtozoan interact with her during this intense creative process? You noted Korinna could be "endlessly nagging Marda from within". Is Korinna a helpful creative consultant, a worried voice of caution about Roman societal norms, or a resentful prisoner who occasionally sabotages Marda's efforts?

Suggestions for Your Consideration:

The Play's Staging: To make the play wildly popular, we could emphasize the spectacle. You mention "actors sailing across the stage on wings." We could describe how Ovidius, with Marda's futuristic insights, devises unprecedented stagecraft—using sophisticated counterweights and rigging to create a truly magical effect of flight that captivates the Roman audience and makes the play a must-see event.

Parallel Themes: The story Daedalus learns aboard the pek ship could directly mirror Marda's own dilemma. Daedalus is presented with two paths for humanity: the pek's offer of managed, safe transcendence and the bumpha's path of risky, self-directed biological evolution among the stars. Daedalus's choice to escape and return to Earth with a new technology (the hang glider) would serve as a powerful mythological endorsement of the bumpha's philosophy, which is exactly what Manny wants to instill in Roman culture.

Whisk wants Romans to have
better technology for writing.
 Augustus's Reaction: Emperor Augustus was a religious conservative and social reformer who exiled Ovid in the original timeline. This new, provocative work could bring Ovid to the Emperor's attention far sooner. We could introduce a scene where Augustus hears of the play. Is he intrigued by its popularity or angered by its subversive theology? This would raise the stakes for Marda and Ovid considerably, tying their personal story directly to the highest levels of Roman power.

I believe that discussing these points will allow me to draft a Chapter 5 that is not only faithful to your detailed plan but also rich with the thematic depth and character dynamics you've already established. I look forward to your thoughts.

MeGemini, you asked about the idea that  Ovidius might develop a "madness" from his experiences with  Manny and Marda and you asked if this "madness"  manifests either as a frenzied, prophetic inspiration that makes him a  more brilliant writer or as a paranoid obsession that  isolates him from his peers even as his work becomes popular. When an  artist is creating works that are truly revolutionary, other people  who observe the artist might be forced to view what is happening as a  wonderful kind of "madness" that has been inflicted upon  the inspired artist. In the case of Ovidius, I imagine that he cannot  stop himself from speaking to other Romans about the FACT that he has  been "abducted by aliens" and taken into outer space to see  the inside of the alien spacecraft Many Sails. It could then become  MADDENING for Ovidius that he has no physical evidence to prove that  he has had personal contact with space aliens nor can he provide  evidence to support his belief that his wife "changed" and  now has knowledge from the future. Rather than continue to rant at his friends  about space aliens in an effort to get them to believe the truth, Ovidus would learn to be satisfied by the act of  creating his "science fiction stories", calling them fiction even if those stories include  actual factual information about the pek and bumpha. The other Romans will only be able to understand what Ovidius writes about the bumpha and the pek as being science fiction.

Romans who compute.
 Gemini, you asked about the "Conservative Religious Authorities": are they the established state priesthood (the Pontifical College), traditionalist senators who see this new mythology as a threat to Roman values (mos maiorum), or perhaps followers of a specific mystery cult? I know nothing about actual Roman culture. One of my main motivations for collaborating with a Large Language Model to write "The Metamorph Intervention" is my hope that a LLM can provide some details about Ovid and ancient Rome that will not be viewed as silly or offensive by people who actually know something about these topics.

Gemini, you asked about my plan for Chapter 5 which includes Ovidius crafting a science fiction story in which Daedalus learns about the pek-bumpha conflict and uses pek nanites to build a hang glider. I imagine that Ovidius will combine plot elements derived from two experiences that he and Marda have had: 1) Ovid's memories of his visit to Many Sails and 2) the what Marda shares with Ovidius about the time when Kenth appeared inside the headquarters of the Metamorph project to chastise Manny the bumpha. The science fiction story about Daedalus could begin with Manny providing Daedalus with information that helps him invent new things. Then Kenth the Overseer of Earth could "abduct" Daedalus and take him to Observer Base and tell Daedalus that he has been used as Manny's tool which has resulted in violations of the Rules of Observation. Daedalus begins to live at Observer Base, a place near Earth where other humans have been taken in the past. I imagine that there could be a mixed population of Neanderthals, Denisovans, Prelands, Anatomically Modern Humans and various human hybrids living inside Observer Base where they have access to some advanced nanotechnolgy. While living inside Observer Base, Ovidius could learn to use clothing nanites (that generate clothing), food nanites (that automatically bring nutrients to residents of Observer Base) and information nanites (that carry useful information and knowledge into a person's zeptite endosymbiont), facilitating human learning and understanding of alien technology. Ovidus could learn how to program nanites and use nanites to make a hang glider. In the story, Observer Base would be depicted as a spaceship that is positioned high above the Aegean. Ovidus jumps out of the spaceship and uses the hang glider to sail back to Athens.

 Gemini, you asked about the Marda and Korinna Internal Dynamic; I imagine Korinna as a helpful creative consultant and a useful source of information about Roman societal norms and how to work constructively with Ovidius.

Gemini: Thank you for that detailed and insightful clarification. Your answers provide a fantastic blueprint for moving forward. I now have a much clearer picture of Ovid's psychological state, the nature of the societal conflict, and the specific mechanics of the story-within-a-story. The idea of Ovid's "madness" being a rational frustration that he channels into creative genius is particularly compelling.

Based on your guidance, I can confidently proceed. I will portray the "Conservative Religious Authorities" as a combination of the traditional state priesthood and influential senators who champion mos maiorum. Their opposition will stem from the story's challenge to the established divine order—depicting gods not as transcendent beings to be worshiped, but as physical, fallible aliens from other worlds, which they would view as a grave impiety that threatens Roman stability.

I will craft the internal dynamic between Marda and the Korinna femtozoan as a seamless, productive partnership. Korinna will be Marda's indispensable guide to Roman culture and Ovid's creative temperament, offering advice and insights that allow Marda to help shape the Daedalus story without anachronistic missteps.

The Daedalus story itself will be the centerpiece, written as you've outlined: a mythic retelling of Ovid's own experiences with Manny and Kenth, transposing them onto the Daedalus character. This structure allows Ovid to embed the factual truths of his encounters into a format that Roman society can digest, even if only as fiction.

I am now ready to generate a first draft of Chapter 5. I will synthesize all these elements to create a chapter that shows Ovid's maddening frustration, his brilliant creative partnership with Marda/Korinna, the crafting of the revolutionary Daedalus play, and the initial tremors of the conservative backlash it is destined to create.

 Here is a first draft of Chapter 5:


 A Mythology for the Future

The weeks following Manny’s visitation became a crucible for Ovidius. He was a man possessed, but not by a divine muse in the way his fellow poets claimed. He was possessed by a truth so vast and unbelievable that it had shattered the comfortable confines of his reality. He tried, at first, to speak of it plainly.

"She was here," he’d told his friend, the poet Propertius, his eyes wide with fervor. "A goddess, yes, but not from Olympus. From the stars! She showed us her vessel, a ship that sails the void between worlds."

Propertius had simply clapped him on the shoulder, a pitying smile on his face. "Publius, my friend, your imagination has finally consumed you. Save such brilliant madness for your verses. It will make you immortal."

The condescension was maddening. Every Roman he spoke to had the same reaction. They saw his frantic conviction not as a factual account, but as the raw material for a new kind of poetry. His wife, Korinna—the new Korinna—was the only one who understood. She was his anchor, the only other witness to the impossible. The change in her was undeniable; she now possessed a depth of knowledge about history, politics, and human nature that was simply astonishing. But that, too, was a truth he could prove to no one. The frustration became a constant, simmering fire in his gut, a pressure that had only one outlet: his writing.

"If they will only accept it as a story," he said to Marda one evening, pacing their small atrium under the watchful eye of the household gods, "then we will give them a story that changes the very way they think about the gods."

He’s ready, whispered Korinna’s femtozoan from the quiet depths of Marda’s shared mind. He has found the path. Guide him gently.

 Marda, feeling more at home in Korinna’s body each day, placed a calming hand on his arm. "Exactly. We won't try to convince them of our truth. We will wrap it in a myth they already know. We will reshape it."

And so they began to craft the new Daedalus. Marda drew upon her memory of Kenth's stark arrival at the Metamorph facility, describing the severe, obsidian-carved figure of the pek Overseer. Ovidius, in turn, wove in the cosmic awe he’d felt aboard Manny’s ship, Many Sails. The story they outlined was a radical departure from the traditional tale.

In their version, Daedalus is not merely a brilliant inventor; he is a man touched by a "goddess" from the stars named Minerva (Manny's chosen Roman persona), who shares with him whispers of advanced knowledge. This attracts the attention of a rival god, a stern and unforgiving being named Custos (the Watcher), who sees this interference as a violation of cosmic law. Custos "abducts" Daedalus, taking him not to a prison on Crete, but to a vast, hovering citadel high above the Aegean—a place called the ‘Observatory’.

"He needs to see the inhabitants of this place", Marda suggested, relaying the details of the Prelands and the other human variants she had learned about.

Ovidius’s stylus flew across the wax tablet. He described the Observatory as a world unto itself, populated by strange and ancient forms of humanity—burly, strong-boned folk with heavy brows and silent, gentle people with an unsettling calm, all living together under the Watcher's stern gaze. Here, Daedalus learns the purpose of the Observatory: to protect the world below from the dangerous ambitions of its own children.

 In the story, Daedalus is given access to the Watcher's technology. Ovidius wrote with feverish intensity, describing technologies Marda had only hinted at. Nanites became "fabricator mites"—tiny, invisible servants that wove clothing from thin air and synthesized food directly into a nutrient paste. Daedalus, the ultimate craftsman, learns to command them. He studies the principles of aerodynamics not from birds, but from information mites that flow directly into his mind, granting him an intuitive understanding of lift and drag.

Korinna, is the language right? Is this too much for them to believe, even as fiction? Marda projected internally.

No, it’s perfect, Korinna’s essence replied. He frames it as divine magic, but describes it with the precision of an engineer. It is both myth and manual. The audience will be captivated.

The climax of their story was Daedalus's escape. Using the fabricator mites, he doesn't build wings of feather and wax. He weaves a massive, winged cloak from spun diamond fiber, a structure of stunning lightness and strength. He builds a hang glider. In the final scene, he leaps from the Observatory's edge, not as a desperate father fleeing a king, but as a defiant mortal who has stolen knowledge from the gods, sailing silently down through the clouds to return to the world of men.

 When Ovidius read the completed draft to a small group of actors, they were silent, stunned. It was blasphemous, thrilling, and utterly original.

"To stage this..." the lead actor breathed, "the spectacle of the flight alone would fill the theatre for a year."

The first performance was a sensation. The theatre was packed. When the actor playing Daedalus, suspended by a clever system of ropes and counterweights Marda had helped design, soared across the stage on his magnificent wings, the audience gasped as one. But as the play's philosophical implications settled in, a different murmur began. In the shadows of the portico, a stern-faced senator named Cato Secundus stood with two members of the Pontifical College.

"This is not art," one of the priests said, his voice tight with disapproval. "It is poison. He portrays the divine as mere travelers from the Moon, fallible and factional. He strips them of their majesty, their mystery."

Cato nodded grimly. "It is a corruption of the mos maiorum. It encourages men to look to the stars for answers instead of to the gods of Rome. It is a dangerous fantasy, and Ovidius is a dangerous man."

Ovidious triumphant: image by Gemini.
 Up in the stands, Ovidius heard the roar of the crowd, a sound of pure adoration. He squeezed Marda’s hand, a triumphant, manic glint in his eyes. For the first time, his madness felt not like a curse, but like a glorious, terrible weapon. He had their attention now. He was satisfied, for the moment, that his fiction was being heard, unaware that the story he had just begun to tell would soon have very real and very powerful enemies.

 

___End Chapter 5______

Figure 7.
At this point, I got the message shown in Figure 7.

Next: Which of the AI-generated versions of Chapter 5 is best?

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May 13, 2025

Decade in re🆅iew

Figure 1. Image generated by Whisk.
A tradition here at the wikifiction blog is the annual Year In Review blog post (see the 2015 review). Here in this blog post, below, is Part 1 of a Decade in Review (DiR) for the time period June 2015 to May 2025. The main goal of this Decade in Review blog post is to create on outline of my fiction writing projects from the past ten years, with a special emphasis on cataloguing those stories that I never completed.

 AI. As part of this DiR, I'll update some of my old story illustrations using text-to-image software such as Whisk to make new AI-generated illustrations such as the one shown in Figure 1 which was built upon a similar illustration that was included in my 2015 Year in Review blog post.

Figure 2. Science fiction
in the Ekcolir Reality.

 A Gohrlay Circle. In June of 2015, my blog post called "The Gohrlay Circle" concerned the important role of my fictional character Gohrlay in providing humans with a future in which they are allowed to spread from Earth to many habitable exoplanets of our galaxy.

Here in May 2025, my recently completed novel "D*" has a seemingly rather minor role for Gohrlay. However, I imagine that the main character in "D*", Tyhry, is the daughter of Gohrlay.

The image shown in Figure 2 is an imaginary science fiction magazine cover from the Ekcolir Reality. For my stories of the Exode Saga, I like to imagine that the science fiction genre was created in the Ekcolir Reality in order to serve as a means of preparing Earthlings for First Contact with space aliens. The space aliens who visited Earth in the Ekcolir Reality were the fru'wu. A fanciful depiction of a fru'wu is shown in Figure 3, below.

Figure 3. The fru'wu Intervention.
I've always depicted Gohrlay as a Neanderthal who lived in the First Reality while Tyhry is a tryp'At replicoid who was born in the Final Reality. Gohrlay is what I call a "Fixed Point in Time", jargon used by time travelers that means many replicoid copies of Gohrlay were made, assuring that in Earth's Reality Chain, every Reality would have at least one analogue of Gohrlay. This was done because it was the mind pattern of Gohrlay that was used to create the positronic brain of R. Gohrlay, the first positronic robot. The analogue of Gohrlay who is a character in "D*" is called Zeta Gohrlay; she is the long-time companion of Eddy, who is Tyhry's father. Of course, there were many other "versions" of Gohrlay, including Zeta's clone sister αGohrlay.

Figure 4. Anthony and Tyhry.
 Fan Fiction. Many of my science fiction stories are fan fiction. My inclusion of positronic robots in "D*" signals that the story is Isaac Asimov-inspired fan fiction. The positronic robots in "D*" are what I call "probots", replicoid-based artificial life-forms that retain a positronic brain, but those brains are composed of femtobot components. Named probots who appear as characters in "D*" are Anthony, Wendy and Pyrk.

As a tryp'At, Tyhry has four breasts (see Figure 4). One of my regrets about "D*" is that I did not take the time to provide the tryp'At characters with their proper tryp'At anatomical features in the illustrations for the story. Tyhry has pointed tryp'At-style ears, but she often hides them under her nanite-enhanced hair.

Figure 5. Luri (teleporting) and
Grean (in the background).
 Luri of Tamari. In June of 2015, I wrote an origins story about an Etruscan princess named Luri. I depicted Luri as growing up on Earth as a telepath under the guidance of an Interventionist agent named Thrukta. Luri was "ahead of her time", an Earthling who had been crafted as a telepath with the ability to obtain information from the Sedron Domain. Only later, in the time of Tyhry, could such a woman be given the ability to control alien technologies like teleportation systems and nanites

However, Luri was able to obtain information telepathically from Thrukta's mind and by way of what I would later call the Sedron Time Stream. Luri had the concept that she could be teleported off of Earth (see Figure 5) while her teleportation duplicate might continue to live on Earth and pass into the human population of Earth her special gene combinations. Luri was given knowledge and artificial memories through the medium of infites (information nanites).

Figure 6. Luri immortalized. Image generated by Whisk.

From the perspective of 2025, I know that in 2015, I was wedded to the idea that Interventionist agents on Earth needed to use human form so as not to be detected by Observers and Overseers.  Thus, Luri was depicted as being a human agent of Interventionists (see Anney's book Luri of Tamari). Later, in my 2025 story "D*", I developed the idea that advanced replicoid technology could be used to make "artificial humans" that could simulate the growth of a human being from embryo to adult. In the 21st century of the Final Reality, where there were no Overseers, Tyhry grew up on Earth as a  replicoid without ever being aware that she was an artificial life-form and with no risk that anyone would notice her artificial nature as a replicoid. 

Figure 7. Stories from the Writers Block.
 The Writers Block. Back in 2015, I was very concerned with details of how the Secret History of Humanity could be told to people living in the Final Reality. I developed the idea of a Writers Block, a "place" in the Hierion Domain where Isaac Asimov (and later Mary Godwin) could work to develop the science fiction genre, often sending story ideas from the Writers Block to authors on Earth.

Within the Ekcolir Reality, Raymond Cummings (see Figure 7) was one of the writers on Earth who was assisted by his replicoid, an artificial copy of his analog from the Asimov Reality. However, in many ways the science fiction literary genre became too successful in the Ekcolir Reality.

Later, in the Final Reality, the archives of the Writers Block could be mined for old stories that had been crafted by residents of the Writers Block. Such stories formed an important part of the vast knowledge that Tyhry had about Deep Time, knowledge that helped guide her adventures (such as those described in "D*") that took place inside the Reality Simulation System.

Figure 8. Was Anney's biological father tryp'At?
(image source)

 Dead Widowers. In 2015, I was often using my other blogs (in addition to the wikifiction blog) as receptacles for my science fiction stories. For example, I had created a blog that I pretended was used to make available on Earth stories about events in Deep Time that might offend the tryp'At Overseers. At the Dead Widowers blog, I posted a story called "The Asimov Reality". I imagined that Angela Fersoni could access information from the Sedron Time Steam and pass that information on to others who could include it in "science fiction" stories, even if the information was factual reporting on events from past Realities.

Exode
Figure 8. Exode in 2025.
Generated by Whisk.

In 2015 I was developing what I thought of as the Exode Trilogy, a series of three novels about Earth's Reality Chain. The Foundations of Eternity was the first part of the Exode Trilogy that I wrote. Following after that was Trysta and Ekcolir, featuring Trysta, the last remaining Asterothrope. The third novel was called Exode and I originally imagined it as a strange love story about Parthney and Kach.

Figure 9. Replicoid assembly.
 Replicoids. During the past ten years of science fiction story writing, what began as a way to control the "butterfly effect" has evolved into a useful way to make artificial copies of human beings.

The image shown in Figure 9 was generated by Whisk. The original image that was used as a reference image for Whisk is in an Aug 15, 2015 blog post called Life By The Numbers. In that blog post, it is described how after the original biological Gohrlay (who was one of the last humans of the First Reality) was destructively scanned, she was later re-built as an artificial life-form: a replicoid. 

Now, here in 2025, I like to imagine that reconstruction was carried out by Manny the bumpha, but in 2015 I had not yet discovered Manny and developed her as a character in the Exode Saga.

Figure 10. Replicoid by WOMBO.
 WOMBO Dream. For the past few weeks, I've been unable to use Mr. Wombo while illustrating my stories. My best guess is that nobody at the company uses that online software, so they did not even notice that it was not working for users like me.

2025 WOMBO update.

One of the reasons I like using WOMBO Dream is that it never cares if I ask it to make images of living people. This has allowed me to adopt famous people for generating the appearance of characters such as Tyhry and Marda. I did not like the way Whisk depicted the nanite stream in Figure 9, so I had Mr. Wombo generate this nanite and the head of the replicoid. For Figure 10, I asked for an image of Kate Jackson, which is how I have been making depictions of Marda for my stories.

Figure 11. Asterothropes by
Whisk and Mr. Wombo.

In an August 2015 blog past called "Tall Tales", I tried to imagine a reason for the strange behavior of Howard Alan Treesong, a character invented by Jack Vance. At that time, I wrote "Howard Treesong's criminal career was the result of... a malfunctioning nanorobotic endosymbiont". In my 2025 story "D*", I included the idea of femtozoans and the idea that Treesong's "multiple personalities" could have been generated by there being multiple femtozoans inside of Treesong. In my imagination, a tall human like Treesong probably has some Asterothrope gene patterns. I requested that Whisk depict the Asterothrope female in Figure 11 as being as tall as the male, but Whisk refused to do that. 

Humanoid alien male by Whisk.
Also, I requested that, "The two humanoid aliens have beautiful faces that conform to human standards of beauty, except for their unusually large eyes." However, Whisk insisted on making the male be ugly (see the image to the left).

I used WOMBO Dream to make the less ugly Asterothrope male that is shown in Figure 11. I'm not sure why Whisk decided to depict these Asterothropes as being barefoot. Also, it looks like the female Asterothrope has no pants. The reference image used for Figure 11 can be seen in this 2015 blog post.

Figure 12. The Sedronite evolutionary tree (source).
 Interventionists. After the positronic robots of Earth drove the pek out of our galaxy, the bumpha ended the Time Travel War, but only by agreeing to give humans the chance to spread from Earth to other planets of the galaxy. The bumpha made use of the Nereids as a source of Interventionist influence for Earth. In 2015, I did not think in terms of the Nereids ever having contact with humans. I depicted Nereid influence on Earth as being through the Grendels and the fru'wu, the Nereids having exited from the Hadron Domain long before the human species came into existence. However, in 2025, in the story "D*", I finally relented and found a way for Tyhry to receive advanced programmable femtobots directly from a Nereid.

Figure 13. Updated Sedronite family tree (source).
 Rules of Intervention. An important blog post from August 2025 was called "Nanites" and it included discussion of the Rules of Intervention.

 Phari vs Nereids. Comparison of Figure 12 to Figure 13 shows that back in 2014, my ideas about Interventionists were rapidly evolving. I was in need of an account of the origins of Earth's Interventionists. Figure 13 shows the beginnings of my thinking about the Phari. R. Gohrlay and R. Nyrtia made use of the Phari and their knowledge of hierions to resist the plans of the pek for converting humans into Prelands who were to quickly ascend from the Hadron Domain and live as Sedronites.

Figure 14. Roben
by Mr. Wombo.
 Roben. In 2015, much of my fiction writing was taking place at my blog that had been specifically created as a platform for the novel "Trysta and Ekolir". For example, I wrote about Roben, the analogue of Gohrlay who existed in the Ekcolir Reality. In that Reality, while Roben lived on Earth, she was not aware of the fact that her body had been shaped by developmental control nanites to disguise her as a modern human, with no obvious Neanderthal features.

That story about Roben mentioned the idea that a replicoid copy of Gohrlay was able to help guide the life of the biological Gohrlay on Earth. In particular, my story about Roben depicted a Reality Change that was implemented in order to prevent Roben from being infected by the AIDS virus. Grean the Kac'hin was able to not only monitor Gohrlay's future in the Ekcolir Reality but also View and plan for events in the next Reality, the Buld Reality. The Ekcolir Reality was named after a man named Ekcolir.

Figure 15. Image mostly generated by Whisk.
Eventually, in the Final Reality, an analogue of Gohrlay, Zeta Gohrlay, would both be allowed to have knowledge of her true identity but also give birth to Tyhry, who I depict as a tryp'At who inherited Neanderthal gene patterns from Zeta.

 Anney's Hypothesis. Anney's Hypothesis is that the Final Reality was planned and implemented so as to provide Gohrlay with a chance to live out a life on Earth and then her telepathic descendants would eventually spread to the stars and populate many additional Earth-like worlds. For the mostly Whisk-generated image in Figure 15, I added the text and manually enhanced the red light. I also got help from Claude for the text prompt.

Figure 16. Magazine covers generated by Whisk.


Figure 17. Space Energy Missions.

I began this "decade in review" blog post in order to identify science fiction story ideas that I have never completed. An example of a story "outline" is in my September 2015 blog post called "I Want To Re-imagine" which has the original image that was used as a reference image for the AI-generated image that is shown in Figure 1, above at the top of this blog page. Imagine a television program that could have been called UFO  2015. Back in 2015 I made an outline of several episodes for that television show, but I never tried to move past that outline.

Figure 18. New York of the future (source).

For the Exode Saga there is a major "climate fiction" component; I imagine that in the Ekcolir Reality there was severe global warming and catastrophic sea level rise. In UFO  2015, fru'wu Interventionists (see Figure 17) bring advanced technology to Earth that can be used to end human dependence on fossil fuels. I imagined episodes of UFO  2015 as being similar to episodes of The X-Files.

Figure 19. Whisk-generated image depicting New York City in the Ekcolir Reality.


Figure 20. Whisk-generated image; help from Claude.

Sometimes Whisk completely fails to understand what I want it to do. In other situations, it seems that Whisk has been explicitly designed to not make the kind of image that I want. When I used the image that is shown in Figure 18, above, as the Whisk "scene" along with the "subject" image that is shown in the upper left corner of Figure 19, Whisk felt certain that there should be a beach in the image that it generated. 

Figure 21. Whisk's (con)fusion.
The instructions I gave to Whisk were: "Replace the flying aircar near the center of the scene image with the aircar from the subject image." Whisk recognized that the giant arm sticking up out of the water was from the Statue of Liberty, but the whole point of the scene is that most of the statue is under water. Whisk usually fails to understand science fiction concepts like "aircar". Figure 20 was generated after I got help from Claude for the text prompt.

For Figure 15, I asked Whisk to show a robot being assembled. When Whisk was asked to make an image with the text prompt including instructions such as, "The robot's body is standing upright, but crucially, the head is separated from the body", Whisk often refused to generate an image. I suspect that Whisk is restricted in its ability to show dismembered people and, apparently, that restriction extends to humanoid robots.

Figure 22. Whisk's Luk'ru.
 Exode. As shown to the right, I was writing chapters for the novel Exode in 2012 ans 2013. Back in those days, I was open about authoring such novels, but later I invented the character named "Eddy" (A.K.A. the Editor) and depicted him as the author. Exode is a good example of a writing project tat I never completed. At one time, I imagined a series of novels that described each Reality in Earth's Reality Chain. In September 2015, in a blog post called "Izhiun's Quest", I wrote a story about Izhiun's early life on a distant exoplanet. Eventually, Izhiun visited Earth and transferred information nanites (infites) into Eddy's body, providing the Editor with useful information about the Secret History of Humanity and how aliens had guided human evolution. 

An account of human evolution is in the September 2015 blog post "Origins of the Sedronites". I imagined that the pek completed their mission of moving some humans into the Sedron Domain about 6,000,000 years ago.

Svahr with a spirit stone (source).
In October 2015, I had a blog post called "Alyeupkigna" in which I included a short X-Files-inspired story about advanced alien nanotechnology. Ten years later, in 2025, I invented the term "femtozoan" to refer to the same concept that was described as "spirit stones", a stone-like object that could hold the endosymbiont of a person. For the Exode Saga, I imagine that humans have advanced alien nanotechnology inside of us: our endosymbionts.

In the story "Alyeupkigna", an Interventionist agent named Svahr must alter the memories of Scully and Mulder in order to prevent them from becoming aware of how in a past Reality, wheeled vehicles were developed in the Americas and in that Reality, advanced technology and an industrial age occurred in the Americas far too early, ultimately leading to a technological catastrophe for Humanity, a catastrophe that could be avoided by means of time travel by Svahr.

A Grendel (left) and an Interventionist agent from
Luk'ru (right) in Dick Girls. Image credits.

In a blog post called "Alien Noir" from October 2015, I quoted Gohrlay as telling Eddy, "Nobody wants to know the truth about the origins of the religions that became dominant in the Final Reality," particularly since hermaphroditic space aliens are so intimately involved. 

 Puritanical Google. Until the much later time (2021) when I finally put this blog behind a "mature content warning", I had to follow Google's absurdly puritanical content rules which basically force PG restrictions on story tellers. The sexuality of the alien hermaphrodites who visited Earth could only be hinted at in 2015.

Related Reading: Decade in Blogging.

Next: Part 2 of my Decade in Review.

The Final Reality.
 Decade in Review (DiR) Table of Contents.
Part 1 - Decade in re🆅iew
Part 2 - GalaȼtiⒸ Ḉore
Part 3 - EX{ⓟℒ}ODE
Part 4 - Adventure∾ iᴎ Noralanᶑ
Part 5 - ᴺiʀutam&maturᴙiᴻ
Part 6 - Pharȉ & Embroĩd Gameš of Ṧite Q
Part 7 - The ℙegasus ℂore on 🤱revik
Part 8 - 𝓚wanya, Ǩwystolf and Ḵwystyk solve 🅺wenslo
Part 9 - Ǝթhit and Ṩite𝓺
Part 10 - Future ᮲𐅛𐒢𒐵
Part 11 - Trăvɘlȋng Yōd sh⍜W
Part 12 - Kŷrt, Alẙs and Jẏm of Alo𝓎sⓨus
Part 13 - Rȩplicōids Ɵn Ȩdgǝ
Part 14 - Sîmulated Vacatĭon
Part 15 - ℱemtozoan ǞḆꞒD*

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