Glenn2
Well-known
There’s a quote I seem to be using more often, source unknown.
“Science is the signal, politics and religion are the noise “.
“Science is the signal, politics and religion are the noise “.
Yes, but unfortunately our lives are probably 90% noise… For some it is 100%.There’s a quote I seem to be using more often, source unknown.
“Science is the signal, politics and religion are the noise “.
According to the Associated Press, that never happened: No evidence video color was manipulated in CNN news segmentFor example, when Joe Rogan got COVID, CNN made him look like a green Martian!
“In this purported original, the Facebook post appears different from the original Instagram video,” Farid said. “It appears that the color is shifted towards red and away from the yellow/green appearance in the original Instagram video.”

I didn't - I saw the report, found Joe Rogan's actual post, compared it to the Instagram video you posted, and showed with a side-by-side comparison that CNN's video was the real video. The source you posted was the one that wasn't reliable.Feel free to use the AP as a reliable source. 😀
I didn't - I saw the report, found Joe Rogan's actual post, compared it to the Instagram video you posted, and showed with a side-by-side comparison that CNN's video was the real video. The source you posted was the one that wasn't reliable.
"The party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command."


www.rangefinderforum.com
AI seems to have improved in the last 3 years... 🤡
Ai and the aim to deceive
I did something that I promised that I wouldn't do; argue online about subjective issues. To cut a long story short here is what happened. On a Facebook group about photography, someone posted a picture that the claim that they shot. Looks like the perfect picture, the right place at the right...www.rangefinderforum.com
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Ai has its place and even now can do a good job in specific niches. AI enhanced post processing of imagery is definitely one of these. I have used a few AI online tools to improve rendering of old images - for example sharpening, colorization etc and while they still have their flaws they often perform much better than alternatives even though there is a bit of "gimcrackery" involved - that is to say it has to take a best guess of how the image was intended to look and make some elements up where it is missing. It's the latter bit that is a bit of a worry. If too much of an image is missing and has to be made up - is the result "real"? That's the question. We already see frankly fake stuff on channels like YouTube where videos containing still images purporting to be historical fact include imagery that is obviously fake to those who are familiar with the subject (but not necessarily to more ignorant souls who take it as real - which is what seems to be intended). I am yet to see any such videos which contain disclaimers that tell the viewer about the made-up stuff contained therein. That might at least be a useful starting point.I must say, I'm finding AI a real boon in my life and work.
In website development with Bootstrap and Javascript, and for debugging, it's been phenomenal. I'm not very technical but know enough to frame prompts well, and I'm doing things I could not otherwise do.
At the non-profit I volunteer for, we're using AI to translate and subtitle videos. Volunteers who could not otherwise produce SRTs and merge them with MP4s are doing so and enjoying it.
Last week I asked AI to give me a simple vegan & gluten free pumpkin pie recipe, and I believe it's about the best pumpkin pie I've ever had.
As far as YouTube is concerned, that experience has always been one of filtering crap. Granted, crap has gotten easier to produce, but otherwise not much has changed.
The other day I found this old pic of my son with way more dust that I'm willing to detail with. I asked AI to clean up the dust and thought it did a fine job. All in about 10 seconds.
Personally, I'm finding AI very exciting. I feel it's all about what you bring to it.
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I have to get the t-shirt!I would suggest doing further research on this off-topic tangent, as it is indeed factual, despite many who do not wish it to be so.
This topic is no longer about AI creating hilarious images of Leicas. 😛 So, getting back on track, here is a new contribution:
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By some perhaps, I don't.So, is moderation also called censorship?
Healthcare is actually one of the areas where AI benefits can (and already are) very significant, especially in diagnostics, drug discovery…Fujifilm is already working on it in their healthcare business segment (medical imaging).
Wonder if this technology will find its way into their electronics/consumer segments:
Synapse AI Orchestrator
Get unprecedented insights from Fujifilm's AI Imaging Orchestrator. Better insight turns into better outcomes. Contact us today! Your patients will thank you.healthcaresolutions-us.fujifilm.com
Wonderful image, at least Photoshopped. But then again his hands look big for what I think they should be.View attachment 4886862
Agreed (but this could jolly well be Ai generated 🤣).