pgk
Well-known
I suppose that when (IF) AI creates the 'perfect' picture and writes a novel which becomes a classic, then we will all be redundant.
I just thank them for stopping by and assure them that my spiritual affairs are well in hand. As for AI, this is some little baby that has been born. What will it do?My pre-AI version was to ask the Mormon solicitors at the front door if god could create a stone he could not lift himself. Cheers, OtL
I could live with that closed system, while still wishing it were otherwise. Those of us who are along in years can remember that before about 1970, this was pretty much how the discipline of photography as an art form was conducted.I totally feel for the comment about "flogging a dead horse in multiple threads," but the fact is that this horse is just now beginning to come to life, and soon it will be pooping everywhere, so we might as well invest some intellectual effort in figuring out how to deal with this new form of horse poop before we're up to our eyebrows...
My thinking is that the big issue is NOT what photographers want to do or not do about it. Nobody's going to stop creating reality-based imagery if that's what we want to do.
The big issue is what viewers are going to want to look at on a large scale. Before online social sharing sites proliferated, people were interested in looking at photographs in glossy magazines. Before that, they were interested in looking at engravings and lithographs. Before that they were interested in paintings in churches, and before that they were interested in looking at sculptures in the agora (or fill in any alternative version of art history you like.) The point is that once a newer image medium came along, people en masse became less interested in looking at the previous media (although of course they never stopped entirely.)
We all like to think we are strong, self-sufficient people who create solely for the satisfaction of meeting our own lofty standards... but I suspect that in reality most of us hope that at least a few people, somewhere, like and respond to what we create. Once people stop being interested in looking at photography, are we going to be happy in a closed system where our only audience is ourselves and other photographers?
Wait until it identifies you as a computer and you have to prove otherwise😉.I see a business opportunity to develop software to differentiate AI generated output from human generated material.
I worked at TMC - Thinking Machines Corporation in Cambridge and on the beautiful CM-5. I left the company shortly before they went belly-up.It was really a Connection Machine.
…the CEO of OpenAI, the company that developed ChatGPT, in a moment of breathtaking honesty, warned that “it’s a mistake to be relying on [it] for anything important right now … we have a lot of work to do on robustness and truthfulness.”
"…the CEO of OpenAI, the company that developed ChatGPT, in a moment of breathtaking honesty, warned that 'it’s a mistake to be relying on [it] for anything important right now … we have a lot of work to do on robustness and truthfulness.'”Interesting comments from the CEO of OpenAI:
That was a terribly interesting architecture. I never got to play with one but enjoyed reading about it in papers. Just a little late for so many things 🙂 and too broke for so many others (I _SO_ desperately wanted a NeXT Cube in 1990! 😉 ) but emulation puts many of them on my desktop now. My Mathematica 3.0 license for Nextstep runs fine in the Previous emulator for example LOL!I worked at TMC - Thinking Machines Corporation in Cambridge and on the beautiful CM-5. I left the company shortly before they went belly-up.
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It was quite the interesting organization - full of extremely bright people and an interesting company culture. My interview process - before being extended an offer - included 4-rounds and a total of 19 people. They were known for this.
I still have some marketing brochures and a black CM-5 t-shirt somewhere in the house.
Thinking Machines
Danny Hillis talks about the real-world challenges of creating artificially intelligent machines.www.technologyreview.com
Yes I don’t think there are many (or any) connection machines operational now. Maybe some blinking LED light show simulations in museums.That was a terribly interesting architecture. I never got to play with one but enjoyed reading about it in papers. Just a little late for so many things 🙂 and too broke for so many others (I _SO_ desperately wanted a NeXT Cube in 1990! 😉 ) but emulation puts many of them on my desktop now. My Mathematica 3.0 license for Nextstep runs fine in the Previous emulator for example LOL!
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Very thankful for the O’Reilly books. They helped me a lot.
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Think of the vast opportunities for color profiles. Imagine being able to do it with voice commands. "HAL, . . . " This really is like the opening of 2001, the obelisk and then the thigh bone. I may have to watch that movie tonight. Or maybe The Man Who Fell to Earth would be more appropriate, and then Blade Runner. Kubrik, Roeg and Scott.Chat GPT use for film simulations:
How to Use ChatGPT to Create Film Simulations Recipes - Fuji Rumors
Fellow Fujifilm Film Simulation member Cris created his own film simulation recipe using ChatGPT. Today I asked ChatGPT to create a Fuji Film Recipe for the GFX50R that mimic’d Kodak Tri-X Pushed One Stop and it created me a pretty respectable emulation. If you want to check out the results, go...www.fujirumors.com