Interesting how it shies away from unequivocal statements, littering qualifiers all over the place, like "fairly", "rather", "mostly", "pretty much", "usually", "almost all", "most likely", "might", "probably", etc.
While it does construct sentences that flow and are loosely on topic (and that's impressive), the content of the presentation is not particularly meaningful. Although I'll admit I liked the slide with the execution squad captioned "A happy ending to all our code".
Maybe it also trained on forum posts. I find myself constantly couching everything I write here with "usually" and "might" because if I don't, there is always some nit-picker that pops out of the woodwork for a cheap and easy "aha! Here is a counter-example to what you just said, therefore your point doesn't apply universally and is invalid!" Adding these qualifiers is automatic for me at this point, to avoid the hassle of dealing with pedantry.
While it does construct sentences that flow and are loosely on topic (and that's impressive), the content of the presentation is not particularly meaningful. Although I'll admit I liked the slide with the execution squad captioned "A happy ending to all our code".