IP #484
1 fiction conversations
over 1 day
(Jan 4, 2024 – Jan 6, 2024)
32% prompt uniqueness
Kingston, Jamaica
Possibly Same User
These IP addresses have similar average prompt embeddings (cosine similarity ≥ 0.85, same state). View as estimated user →
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Activity Timeline ▶
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Jan 4, 2024
Jan 6, 2024
All conversations
Conversation Clusters (14)
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C0
Write an alternate history scenario in the form of a historical documentary chap
9 conv.
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Write an alternate history scenario in which the Beiyang Government of the Repub
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Write an alternate history scenario in the form of a documentary history book ch
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Write an alternate history scenario in the form of a documentary history book ch
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Write a riveting, captivating, lengthy, descriptive, dialogue-filled and on-poin
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Write an interesting, plausible and lengthy alternate history scenario in the fo
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Write an interesting, plausible, year by year, realistic alternate history timel
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Write an alternate history scenario in the form of a historical documentary chap
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Write a dialogue filled, action-packed, martial arts-filled, gun-play-filled urb
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Write a realistic, sensible and alternate history scenario in the form of a hist
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Write an alternate history scenario in the form of a documentary history book ch
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Write an alternate history scenario in the form of a documentary history book ch
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Write an alternate history scenario in the form of a historical documentary chap
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Write an alternate history scenario in the form of a historical documentary chap
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1 conversation in cluster Cluster 13× “Write an alternate history scenario in the form of a histori...” over less than a minute (Jan 6, 2024 – Jan 6, 2024), oldest first.
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USER: Write an alternate history scenario in the form of a historical documentary chapter with no references to this being an alternate history scenario, in which the Empire of Vietnam ruled by the Ngyuen dynasty as its imperial family is formed as a restoration of the Southern Ming rump state of the Ming dynasty during its creation in 1802, due to the Ngyuen dynasty's claimed descent from the Ming dynasty's imperial family, the Imperial House of Zhu. The Empire of Vietnam successfully integrates Cambodia and Laos into Vietnam before seizing Cantonia during the Qing Empire's troubles with the Western colonial powers and combining the Ming-style government with Western constitutional monarchy, strengthening its military force, and reviving the Ming treasure fleets, military prowess, Jingyiwei, and guard battalion system, while also adopting the Ming dynasty's red sun on a orange banner sun flag as its civil banner and the Ming dynasty's sun and moon flag as its state flag, preventing the French colonial occupation of Indochina. During the Xinhai Revolution of 1911 that topples the Great Qing Empire, Vietnam manages to seize Han China via a combination of military might and infiltration of the Chinese Republican movement, reunifying China under its banner and restoring the actual Ming dynasty with the actual descendants of the House of Zhu being absorbed into the Ngyuen dynasty via intermarriage, concubinage and adoption. Tibet, Manchuria and East Turkestan remain independent as Manc...
CHATBOT: ### Chapter VI: The Emergence of a Unified Asiatic Colossus At the dawning of the 19th century, the world witnessed the resurgence of a power that would dramatically alter the course of Asian history--the Empire of Vietnam, ruled by the resolute Nguyen Dynasty. Ascending to prominence upon the footprints of a beleaguered Southern Ming rump state, the Nguyen lords daringly laid claim to the noble bloodline of the Ming Dynasty's imperial family, the House of Zhu. It was a lineage that resonated deeply with the cultural soul of Asia, a sovereign link thought to be severed by the ascendancy of the Qing. The Empire of Vietnam, proclaimed in 1802 by Emperor Gia Long, became a beacon of restored heritage--a Ming phoenix risen from the remnants. The Nguyen, with their proclaimed Ming ancestry, embarked on a campaign of integration, which by mid-century saw the incorporation of Cambodia and Laos into the fold. They asserted control over these lands through a balanced amalgamation of diplomacy, cultural assimilation, and resolute military campaigns. But it was the acquisition of Cantonia, during a time when the Qing Empire grappled with Western incursions, that heralded the sovereignty and might of Vietnam. The ruling Nguyen exploited the Qing's preoccupation with opium and Britain to annex what was colloquially known as Guangdong, the southern heartbeat of trade and innovation. With it, the Empire of Vietnam garnered not only territory but a window into a world of modernization that it had not yet fully embraced. And embrace it did. Vietnam meticulously crafted a marvel of governance--a traditional Ming-styled bureaucracy infused with the constitutional monarchism that trickled in from the Western world. Not content with merely observing the global exchange of ideas, the Nguyen Dynasty resurrected the grandeur of Ming treasure fleets, reformed the military, and reinstated the elite Jingyiwei and guard battalion systems. The banners of old rippled anew, with the radiant red sun emblazoned on an orange backdrop; it was a flag defiantly unfurled against the specter of French colonial ambition. In a stunning narrative divergence, 1911 marked the zenith of Vietnamese ascendancy rather than the advent of the Republic of China. The fall of the Qing did not yield the expected fragmentation, but rather provided a fulcrum upon which Vietnam leveraged its philosophy, martial prowess, and espionage to seize the Han heartland. Military expeditions, coupled with cunning infiltra...
USER: Staying and continuing with the alternate history scenario prompted and generated in the previous entries and keeping the documentary history book format: Great! How did the Empire of Vietnam reconcile its formation as a restoration as a Ming rump state with Vietnamese nationalism and how did it avoid becoming a tributary state to the Qing Empire? How was the Vietnamese army and navy modernized and the Jingyiwei, guard battalions and treasure fleet modernized and the governance systems of the actual Ming dynasty and the Nan Ming merged with Western constitutional parliamentary royal democracy and Vietnamese government structures? And how was Cantonia seized from the Qing Empire leading to the de-facto restoration of the Nanyue Kingdom?
CHATBOT: ### Chapter VII: From Restoration to Reconciliation: National Identity and Sovereignty The path to reconciling Vietnam's Ming-centric restoration with burgeoning Vietnamese nationalism began with a delicate cultural dance--a unification of past glory with present identity. Emperor Gia Long, a learned man steeped in Confucian tradition and astutely aware of his diverse subjects' aspirations, emphasized shared history over ethnic disparity. Promoting an ideology of regional renaissance rooted in the Confucian values shared by Vietnam and the fallen Ming, he merged the sentiments of resurrecting a golden age with the unbroken spirit of Vietnamese independence. The specter of Qing influence loomed, but Vietnam's diplomatic acuity and the affirmation of a unique cultural heritage rebuffed the notion of becoming a tributary. A nuanced balance was struck; Vietnam projected sufficient deference to maintain peaceful relations with the Qing while asserting autonomous authority internally. Trade relations flourished under a veneer of goodwill, cloaking the Nguyen's quiet defiance and their relentless quest for self-strengthening. ### Chapter VIII: Modernization of Might and Mind Vietnam's emergence as a burgeoning power was grounded in a steadfast program of military and administrative modernization. Emperor Minh Mang, successor to Gia Long, was the linchpin in these transformative efforts following in the footsteps of Meiji Japan. He introduced a swath of reforms that veered from the rigid structures of the Ming and early Nguyen rule, favoring instead the adoption of Western military advancements and industrial techniques that had revolutionized Europe and Japan. The military benefitted first from the acquisition of European armaments and ships, then from the establishment of indigenous arms factories, and finally from the training of cadres under foreign experts. Similarly, the Jingyiwei evolved into a proto-intelligence agency with global reach, while the esteemed guard battalions became elite units equipped with modern knowledge and equipment. The treasure fleet, however, morphed entirely, from a display of majesty to a conduit of international commerce and diplomacy harnessing steam power. Governance experienced parallel evolution. Respecting the Ming tradition of bureaucracy, the Empire of Vietnam introduced meritocratic exams calibrated with contemporary studies, synthesizing Confucian classics with new sciences and political theories. A bicameral parliamentar...