https://openai.com/dall-e-2/
Edit: It appears celebrity faces are blocked (or melted!); should have guessed that really.
"young jack nicholson pops a wheelie on his scrambler while riding across sand dunes at sunset photorealistic"




Jesus fuck, was about to sayRGC wrote:Edit: It appears celebrity faces are blocked (or melted!)
Yeah, it's fair to say I'm way behind the curve with this tech, hence a bit easily impressed. Initially my mind was blown by the possibilities, but after spending a while dicking about trying to create a shmup themed image with DALL-E 2, I couldn't get close to the result I was hoping for. Still, I had fun seeing what it was capable of. We're not quite at the point where we can say these tools are only limited by the accuracy of the user's instructions, but it feels like we're not that far off.BryanM wrote:The progress on this stuff has been crazy, DALL-E is like banging two rocks together by today's standards. As Robert Miles says, we're at the part of the exponential curve that actually feels exponential.
Yeah, I'm liking the result.BryanM wrote: They certainly seem more artistic. Could never get the thing to render the ducklings following behind him. Getting the meat on the fork was a no-go, though it delights me with the one that has the piece of brain stuck to a piece of busted lumber. The tree on the horizon being transformed into that imposing jumble of roots and vines is kind of cool...
Cheers bud! I wonder if it's a friendly misunderstanding, with ol' Jebus merely trying to cure our out-of-town friend of his pissedness for the long flight home, via his Hokuto Shinken?RGC wrote:One for BIL:
Emscripten is the way if you want to use C/C++, though for systems langs I'd go with Rust since (among a thousand other sanity-saving reasons) you can download a working wasm toolchain from the CLI and compile it straight to webshit. Pay no mind to the hundred hour learning curve behind the curtainBryanM wrote:as soon as I can figure out how to make browser programs without having to use Javascript. (Emscripten or WebAssembly in general looks like it might be the tool for the job. I don't know why it has to be such a huge f'n pain, and we can't just use something like C or Basic or even Java, like a normal human being...)
You can't enforce that and it will only keep the most lowly of plebs out. The first thing almost anyone can do is train their own work into their own customized model. Then, you're going to process it further amd expand out your idea. Artists that use AI in their workflow can (simply) lie. Problem solved. There's nothing you can possibly do to lock them out of copyright protection.MJR wrote: Fortunately, the recent mass protest at artstation and the recent decision by US copyright office that AI-generated content has no right to claim copyright is a sign that you can't push real people off their jobs just like that.
Wow. That's almost evil. Thanks for the share.BryanM wrote:One immediate use of this stuff is colorizing all that black and white manga art.
Also... making your own AVGN episodes.
Yeah, the content pipeline is going to be absolutely saturated to the point that monetizing it would be a bitch. Patreons and free content all around; It'd be webnovels all the way down man - the only content authors would be creating is scripts, essentially. Democratizing our entertainment is a good thing, trust me.There's nothing you can possibly do to lock them out of copyright protection.
Thy wish is granted!BryanM wrote:It would be cool to get to see some new episodes of The Simpsons...
Vanguard wrote:Thy wish is granted!BryanM wrote:It would be cool to get to see some new episodes of The Simpsons...
It's funny! I'm glad AIs turned out to be irrational goofballs instead of the dispassionate rationalists you'd see in all the sci-fi shows. Personally, I'm a fan of the Sydney, new bing AI:RGC wrote:Holy crap I'm easily entertained.
It is already in a state that a human writer or artist can produce professional-quality work in a fraction of the usual time by using an AI's work as a base. It's also improving at an explosive rate and we have no idea when or if we will see it stop.MJR wrote:After following this for some time, I've become convinced AI will be the IT bubble of 2020's. Too many people expecting too much out of it in the awe of something new. AI generated stuff only looks good in the surface, anyone understanding even a bit of deeper of graphics and art knows it's images are not really that good. Same goes with AI generated text, stories and poems. And code. They're all look good and promising on the surface, but really bit bland, unoriginal and... shit, really.
Don't worry, they'll come up with a new set of rules that ensures corporations can own this stuff and civilians can't. That's the whole point of intellectual property law, after all.MJR wrote:And yes, they will never be able to copyright AI generated content. Precedent already happened with that AI-generated comic.
Fixed your quote for you. I am highly amused that you are already spinning this as some kind of Common People Enabler Against Evil Corporations - when in truth those Corporations are the one who aim to own the AI tools, and thus own everything that these mouthbreathers shit from their generators.Vanguard wrote:MJR wrote: It is already in a state that a human writer or artist can produce shitty-quality kitsch work in a fraction of the usual time by using an AI's work as a base. It's also improving at an explosive rate and we have no idea when or if we will see it stop.
Don't worry, they'll come up with a new set of rules that ensures corporations can own this stuff and civilians can't. That's the whole point of intellectual property law, after all.MJR wrote:And yes, they will never be able to copyright AI generated content. Precedent already happened with that AI-generated comic.
You seem pretty mad about the continued diminishment of "the human element"these mouthbreathers shit from their generators.
Well you fucked up fixing it, but setting that aside, AI is in many ways an enabler and many of those enabled by it are common people. For example, someone who isn't good at horrid corporate speak could write a message and then ask an AI to rewrite it in a more professional tone. Obviously you'd still need to carefully proofread and edit the result because otherwise that could turn out badly.MJR wrote:Fixed your quote for you. I am highly amused that you are already spinning this as some kind of Common People Enabler Against Evil Corporations - when in truth those Corporations are the one who aim to own the AI tools, and thus own everything that these mouthbreathers shit from their generators.
I played a legit and full text-based adventure game with ChatGPT. It's pretty unreal how advanced that really is.BryanM wrote:Well, as long as MMO's can stay in the honeymoon hype period forever I'm fine with it.
I love how the opposite ends of the curve here are Tetris and Zork.BryanM wrote:Spoiler
It may just be me, but I think it's perfectly acceptable and rather impressive for a stupid soulless toaster to mix those two things up back in those dark ages of.... last year.Gary Goalpost Mover wrote:“a deep level understanding”?
Seriously?!
Your system can’t distinguish “a horse riding an astronaut” from “an astronaut riding a horse”.