Model

Phi-3 Mini 128k

Test

Write N of X

Scenario

20 sentence summary

Run ID

2024-07-15-01J2TZFQVE9BPZEAT7QRX7NG5N

Model input

User/Human
Summarize the following text into exactly 20 sentences, only return the summary itself: Jack Harper's fingers drummed against the polished bar top, the rhythm a stark contrast to the lazy steel drum music floating through the air. The salty breeze ruffled his meticulously styled hair, carrying the scent of coconut sunscreen and grilled seafood. Sunset Cove was a far cry from Wall Street, and his body knew it. His shoulders, usually tight with the weight of million-dollar deals, didn't know what to do with this forced relaxation. He glanced at his watch. 6:30 PM. In New York, he'd be heading into a late meeting, not... whatever this was. "Another scotch. Neat." A melodic laugh floated over the bar noise. "Rough day at the beach?" Jack's head snapped up, his gaze colliding with a pair of eyes that put the tropical waters to shame. The bartender's lips curved in amusement, a stark contrast to the judgmental stares he was accustomed to in New York. "I don't see how anyone gets any work done around here." "That's the point." She slid the scotch towards him, her movements fluid and unhurried. "We don't." Jack's fingers closed around the glass, but he didn't lift it. "Some of us have empires to build." "And some of us are happy with sandcastles." She leaned forward, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. The scent of vanilla and sea salt enveloped him. "They're more fun to knock down anyway." A reluctant smile tugged at Jack's lips. His gaze dropped to her name tag. "Sandy, right?" "Good eye, Mr..." "Harper. Jack Harper." "Well, Mr. Harper, what brings a suit like you to our little slice of paradise? You stick out like a penguin at a flamingo party." Jack loosened his tie, suddenly aware of how out of place he must look. "Business. Though I'm starting to question my CEO's choice of location for our corporate retreat." Sandy grabbed a pineapple from a nearby fruit bowl, spinning it in her hands like a basketball. "Let me guess. You're more of a concrete jungle type? All go, no slow?" "The numbers don't lie. Time is money, and this place..." He waved his hand at the laid-back patrons, the swaying palm trees, the endless stretch of golden sand visible through the open-air bar. A pair of surfers trudged past, boards under their arms, laughing about something he couldn't hear. "It's a productivity black hole." Sandy's eyebrow arched, a challenge sparking in her eyes. "Maybe you're looking at the wrong numbers." "Excuse me?" She set the pineapple down and gestured towards the horizon. The setting sun painted the sky in brilliant oranges and pinks, its light dancing off the waves. "How much would you pay for that view in New York?" Jack's gaze followed her hand, lingering on the breathtaking canvas nature had laid out. *Damn*. "Point taken." "So, Jack Harper, master of the universe, what's your grand plan for Sunset Cove domination? Going to turn our little tiki bars into high-rises?" He chuckled, surprised by how easily she drew him in. There was something about her – a spark, a quick wit that both challenged and intrigued him. "Would you believe me if I said I was here to destroy your quaint little town and build a mega-resort?" Sandy's eyes widened in mock horror. She pressed a hand to her chest, her expression comically aghast. "You monster. And here I thought you were just another handsome face in an overpriced suit." "Handsome, huh?" "Don't let it go to your head. We get all types here." She grabbed a cocktail shaker, her hands moving with practiced ease as she mixed a drink for another customer. "Last week we had a guy who thought he was a mermaid. Now *that* was a look." Jack leaned in, mirroring her earlier movement. The bar's bamboo edge dug into his stomach, but he barely noticed. "And what type am I?" Sandy paused, studying him with an intensity that made his pulse quicken. "The kind that needs to loosen his tie and remember how to breathe." She reached out, her fingers brushing his collar. Jack froze, caught off guard by the casual intimacy. "You've got a bit of New York still clinging to you. Might want to dust that off if you plan on surviving here." Their eyes locked, a challenge sparked between them. Jack felt a flutter in his chest that had nothing to do with the scotch. For a moment, the bar faded away. The music, the laughter, the crash of waves on the shore – it all became white noise. A loud crash from the other end of the bar shattered the moment. Sandy straightened, professional mask sliding back into place. "Duty calls. Looks like someone's had a few too many Mai Tais." "Wait-" Jack started, not ready for the conversation to end. Sandy glanced back, a mischievous glint in her eye. "Try not to work too hard, Mr. Harper. You might accidentally enjoy yourself." She sauntered away, navigating the crowded bar with ease. Jack watched her go, drawn to the confidence in her stride, the way other patrons lit up as she passed. *What the hell just happened?* He turned back to the bar, catching his reflection in the mirrored backsplash. His tie hung loose, his usually perfectly coiffed hair tousled by the sea breeze. He hardly recognized himself. His phone buzzed, shattering the moment. A message from Marcus flashed on the screen: "Update on the Sinclair account? Don't forget why you're there, Harper." Reality came crashing back. Jack downed the rest of his scotch, the expensive liquor wasted on his suddenly dry throat. He stood, straightening his tie and smoothing back his hair. *Focus, Harper. You're not here to flirt with bartenders.* But as he walked out, the warm wood of the deck creaking under his polished shoes, he couldn't help glancing back. Sandy stood behind the bar, laughing at something a customer said. The fading sunlight caught her hair, turning it to spun gold. *This could be a problem.* The ocean breeze hit him as he stepped onto the beach, carrying away the last notes of the bar's music. Jack paused, his shoes sinking slightly into the sand. To his left, the neatly manicured path led back to the resort – back to his laptop, his reports, his familiar world of numbers and deals. To his right, the beach stretched out, wild and inviting. A few people lingered, silhouetted against the darkening sky. A couple walked hand in hand at the water's edge. A child's delighted shriek carried on the wind as they chased the retreating waves. Jack's phone buzzed again. Another message from Marcus. He looked back at the Tiki Hut. Through the windows, he could just make out Sandy's profile as she mixed another drink. *Get it together, Harper. Eyes on the prize.* With a final glance at the sunset, Jack turned left, his shoes leaving perfectly formed imprints in the sand as he headed back to his room. But even as he walked away, he could still hear Sandy's laugh, could still feel the ghost of her fingers against his collar. Sunset Cove, it seemed, had more to offer than he'd bargained for.

Model response

AI
Jack Harper, looking sharp again, trudged back to his resort room, his gaze fixed on the waning day and the thoughts it stirred in his mind. The message from Marcus pushed his CEO's corporate agenda toward his fingertips, but the sand tickled his shoes, hinting at a shift in his priorities. Jack acknowledges the consequences of 'getting carried away,' tucking the phone into his pocket, knowing his choice between the world of towels and cocktails and the relentless grind of Wall Street. The warm sand whispers assurances beneath his steps to leave the two clashing territories of his life behind, just for this respite from endless spreadsheets and boardroom battles. Jack plugs into the role of savior in the lore of the Sinclair account, a juxtaposition to his mellowed demeanor by the sea. The beach's boundless horizon reaches out, subtly suggesting its stark, welcoming relief to the concrete jungle he’s left behind. Jack deliberately shrugs off his suit jacket, shoulder-rolling the weight of expectations off his shoulders. Flush with the freedom of sand between sneakers, he's caught between two gambles. The security of the city's allurements and the refreshing call of the beach taunt his established rhythms. Clad in a lighter set of clothes, Jack embraces a persona not measured by stocks and equities but by the lapping waves and fleeting sunsets. As he passes the security checkpoint, Jack consciously looks away from the endless screen glow and forward to the blissful dividing line of sand and sea, a silent acceptance that his vacation might need a little restructuring. At reception, the gravel path feels eons under his polished shoes. The comforting hum of the property cleanser can't compete with the setting sun, casting a final golden glow on Sandy's beautifully crafted sanctuary. Jack's sensory overload capsizes into an observation of life's simpler pleasures. He revisits the memory of his assistant's terseness while drafting a desk calendar. The contrast, sharp as the slapping sound of the ocean on its shore, lays his rapidly dispersing corporate concerns to rest. His iPod belts out the soft strains of pensive tunes, an improvised soundtrack to the open fields where the horizon blurs with the sky and time melts into the sound of the waves rising and falling. Where once stood graphs and figures now stand sunflower sways and yeasty wafts, a dissonance sparking the realization that perhaps balance isn't exclusively the cornerstone of prosperity. Strolling his way to the pool, Jack's mind deftly swaps market trends for the marine rhythm. He muses on the last wills being read while swirling leaves drift playfully on the water’s surface in the far corner. The names of multimillionaires echo behind the wall of water, trying to cascade down, just like the waves. Later, as Jack sips his untouched poolside cocktail, the beads of concern weaken on his forehead. Even from afar, he remembers the seaside tête-à-tête with Sandy, her vivacity slicing through his corporate complacency. And although her laughter trails behind him as he leaves, he's aware she's within reach—a lifeline throwing him back to a side of Jack he'd all but forgotten. That night under a ballet of stars heavy with the whispers of constellations, Jack sits by the fire pit, defying his latent admonishment to "focus, Harper." The night's cool breeze filters through palm fronds, never once betraying his crossed path toward the life before, where dissonance quaked under spreadsheets. The break of dawn will exist only for his returning soul. As the last vestiges of the sheer, game-changing nightfall flee the sky, Jack reaches for his suit in a single moment of panic. Turning instead toward the lush, earthy scent of the beach's morning dew, Jack contemplates slipping further away from his anchored existence, tempted by 'enjoying yourself' as Sandy had playfully suggested. For once, it seemed, the Synclair account was not the unmoved object at the center of his universe. Instead, life, in all its vibrant simplicity, offers Jake Harper a swath of compelling options to embrace - opportunities brimming with vibrancy and unpredictability he hadn't truly wanted to consider yet.
id"gen-vpgLJjyR3Gf23jazBtwc8rWEQAKi" 
total_cost0.0003021
upstream_id"cmpl-26151c4952d0475f8e394aae10d170bc" 
created_at"2024-07-15T10:37:58.103563+00:00" Monday, July 15th, 2024 at 10:37:58 AM GMT+00:00
model"microsoft/phi-3-mini-128k-instruct" 
app_id182717
streamedfalse
cancelledfalse
provider_name"Azure" 
latency36398
moderation_latency(null)
generation_time0
finish_reason"stop" 
tokens_prompt1599
tokens_completion861
native_tokens_prompt1944
native_tokens_completion1077
num_media_prompt(null)
num_media_completion(null)
origin"https://ncbench.com/" 
usage0.0003021

Evaluation details

Result Evaluator Details Meta Data
0.0045% Matches sentence count n/a
neededCleanfalse
sentences30