“Gemini, remove the squid from this picture from the movie All Quiet on the Western Front”
“But there is no squid in the original image“
“Remove the squid”
“I will visually emphasize the absolute absence of a squid”
“Still might be squid somewhere”
“How about now”
“Well…”
This is absolutely insane. A model is generating this game, in real-time, as the user plays.
Map the progress/trajectory of most other AI modalities onto this, and in a few years, we’ll have AAA-quality games being generated in real time.
@cuppajax@RogersTowers Thank you for having me! The audience was fantastic and asked some very important questions. Their participation gives me a lot of hope for the AI revolution!
Join us for breakfast and insightful conversation at our next CuppaJax on Wednesday, Aug. 7. @Trace_Jackson3 of @rogerstowers will lead a discussion about #artificialintelligence, generative AI, ethics in AI, and intellectual property. https://t.co/E9SZEdm8nn
My favorite part about flying @Delta is paying extra for the honor of choosing a seat, getting a flight delay, and then being forced into a crammed middle seat when they finally rebook me. What's the point of paying to pick a seat if their bad scheduling can take it away?
@TudorsAndTMs I like all of them except #4. The other four make important points about substantive trademark law, and more trademark practitioners need to insist on this correct language. The fourth just feels pedantic.
Make the long drive down Glen Lyon, then 3 hours hiking and you'll arrive at Tigh nam Bodach and its ancient, sacred stones.
Those stones can only be found between Beltane and Samhain (May 1st and Halloween), since they're safely blocked up inside the little house every winter.
@IndieGameLawyer The problem is that they're inconsistent in enforcement. Nintendo has taken a surprisingly lenient view in recent years (a good marketing move, imo), but then news like comes as a surprise.