Based on our record, NovelAI seems to be a lot more popular than GPT-3 Demo. While we know about 141 links to NovelAI, we've tracked only 5 mentions of GPT-3 Demo. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
A lot more apps coming.. https://gpt3demo.com/. Source: over 1 year ago
Have you had a look at https://gpt3demo.com? Source: over 2 years ago
Great question! So many great use cases. We listed 190+ examples at https://gpt3demo.com. Source: almost 3 years ago
Check some apps on this site GPT-3 Apps Maybe something like usetopic.com. Source: almost 3 years ago
We listed a few of them at https://gpt3demo.com/. Source: about 3 years ago
All your questions are answered on https://novelai.net/. Source: 12 months ago
If you want to know exactly which apps I used. The chats use Stable Diffusion, so you can go there and generate whatever you like directly, instead of messing with chat interfaces. As for the websites that do this for you, I'm pretty sure they're using stable diffusion as well. To access stable diffusion, go to https://dreamstudio.ai/generate If you want to try novel AI, go to https://novelai.net and get the basic... Source: 12 months ago
For fictional stories, Sudowrite [https://www.sudowrite.com/] and NovelAI [https://novelai.net/]. For writing in general, Copy AI & WriteSonic are great alternatives (links are listed in the official post). Source: 12 months ago
The service framework I aim to simulate is https://novelai.net/ where they allow 50 text generation before signing up and 50 text generations after signing up. However, it was pretty simple to modify my local storage for unlimited text generation. My main concern is how can I track the users who have yet to sign up? Source: 12 months ago
To preface this, I've been playing around with AI-assisted novel writing for a while, having used HoloAI and NovelAI quite extensively, and playing around with KoboldAI and the Nerys and Erebus models they've trained. So far, my impression had been that the quality of the locally hosted models didn't quite live up to the paid offerings, coming down to (presumably) less finetuned models and less capable GUIs. Source: 12 months ago
GPT3 Crush - Curated list of OpenAI's GPT3 demos
Holo AI - Write & play AI stories
Copysmith - GPT-3 powered content marketing that feels like magic
Dreamily - Dreamily, AI-assisted creative writing tool for literary enthusiasts and creators.
re:tune - The missing frontend for GPT-3
InferKit - State-of-the-art text generation