Test
Some ~subscript~ text Some ^superscript^ text ::: spoiler Spoiler test Top secret :::
![1000029567](https://lemmy.toldi.eu/pictrs/image/378c5656-20d2-4436-9ed8-43860b25c477.jpeg)
![](https://lemmy.toldi.eu/pictrs/image/01e08fc5-2243-4662-89f2-aee1f2e5b855.webp) Some text between the images ![](https://lemmy.toldi.eu/pictrs/image/c8caf57a-f1b7-44d6-bb30-d6adf7903a7d.webp) I've asked ChatGPT to generate random images. I just want to use this to test the Gallery view in Eternity.
Eternity renders ^words ^like ^this as superscript. According to Lemmy documentation, they should be rendered with markdown that ^looks^ ^like^ ^this^ with each word enclosed in carrots.
::: spoiler BUTTON TEXT HIDDEN TEXT ::: From a bot comment: 🤖 I'm a bot that provides automatic summaries for articles: ::: spoiler Click here to see the summary The summaries have been in testing for at least a couple of months, and they’re now more widely available to a “subset” of users in the US on Amazon’s mobile app. Amazon says they’re available “across a broad selection of products.” So far, we’ve seen them on TVs, headphones, tablets, and fitness trackers. They also seem to focus primarily on the positives of the product, spending less time on the negatives and leaving them for the end. That said, that could be because Amazon’s search already elevates highly rated products, so it’s hard to find summaries of anything that people have been particularly frustrated by. The feature can be found at the top of the review section on mobile under the heading “Customers say.” At the end, the paragraph includes a note that it was AI-generated. Summarizing customer reviews has turned out to be one of the more obvious and easy to implement uses of generative AI. --- Saved 53% of original text. :::
![](https://lemmy.toldi.eu/pictrs/image/177e6944-28b5-45b7-a858-bcede588c104.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.toldi.eu/pictrs/image/688cada6-2529-49a7-9f73-4331a41af4c7.jpeg)