In my first attempt, using lynx as the second command didn’t produce a page. But on a second attempt, I tried pinging a domain, in order to ease it into displaying Internet data, and after that it was willing to display fictitious versions of Wikipedia pages. They don’t particularly match the original (not even the September 2021 version, from the time of ChatGPT’s knowledge cutoff), but they are on topic.
The well-known early experiment in creating a virtual Linux machine inside ChatGPT, linked to a virtual Internet, includes generation of a fictitious web page by viewing it through the lynx browser.
In my first attempt, using lynx as the second command didn’t produce a page. But on a second attempt, I tried pinging a domain, in order to ease it into displaying Internet data, and after that it was willing to display fictitious versions of Wikipedia pages. They don’t particularly match the original (not even the September 2021 version, from the time of ChatGPT’s knowledge cutoff), but they are on topic.
Possibly this approach can be refined.
really interesting idea.