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zvive t1_islvr87 wrote

You're a wizard Harry!

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quiettryit t1_islwwop wrote

We're getting to the point where you can design a game or program a holodeck just by telling the computer what we want... And it will generate and fill in all the holes...

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Education-Sea t1_isml3c5 wrote

Can't believe the tech is so advanced this early on! We didn't have Dall-E 2 years ago!

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3Quondam6extanT9 t1_ismog67 wrote

The strangest part of AI generated video is that if you look at a specific part of it in detail directly, there is this fuzzy detachment in the arrangement of elements. Always like a rearranging dream in a cohesive state of flux never quite stable but never quite chaos.

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wait_whats_illegal t1_ismzwqq wrote

A bit out of topic but i was watching I am thinking of ending things by Charlie Kaufman. I don't wanna delve into the plot or whatever but essentially it addresses exactly what you're talking about. The way a dream works by rearranging patterns constantly and it's just so weird how this translates to AI as well. It's weird but i wonder if this parallel is merely a coincidence or maybe there are latent underlying similarities between how we process a dream and how Clip mesh works

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dingle__dogs t1_isz3na1 wrote

I think it's more that the fundamental nature of reality is this "constantly rearranged patterns" in that our physical world is loosely connected particles that only have structure when you "zoom out"

But in the real world, there is such a higher fidelity that we can't physically perceive the "fuzziness" which is actually always there. Dreams and this AI clip mesh are lower fidelity / quality so we can perceive the noise directly with our senses

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wait_whats_illegal t1_iszlyqa wrote

That's an interesting perspective. But pertinent to the original comment, do you think the fuzziness caused when we dream can be correlated with clip mesh's algorithm itself? My point is that when we usually dream, all of the individual objects that we picture are all loosely hanging and since we mostly don't focus on them individually they just keep moving around changing in shape, composition and sometimes disappear. This mostly happens because of how our brains are only to an extent functioning. They don't store any object specific information.

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