On the one hand, it's impressive to see how far it's come.
On the other hand, it's still lightyears away from being acceptable on its own merits.
On the third hand, there was nothing innovative or new added that wasn't already in classic Tom and Jerry shorts. Everything about it looked recycled in the worst way.
If someone ever actually makes a full show using AI, it might be an interesting novelty, but it'll also clearly be operating above its grasp.
I don't think it'll ever work like you giving it a script and out comes something good. There's too much distance and intelligence between the words and a good result.
Instead, you'll be able to film a movie with cardboard props and have the AI make it look real. The director himself will be able to play every character and make them look and sound like actual different people.
Yeah, as a development milestone of a new tool, it's possibly interesting. Honestly it doesn't even seem significantly different from a lot of other demos in terms of capability though.
As a product in and of itself, this looks like absolute garbage, nonsense scenes with levitating men, characters popping out of existence randomly, weird animation artifacts all over.
The most interesting part was seeing how the curse of hands apparently also applies to door handles too.
On the one hand, it's impressive to see how far it's come.
On the other hand, it's still lightyears away from being acceptable on its own merits.
On the third hand, there was nothing innovative or new added that wasn't already in classic Tom and Jerry shorts. Everything about it looked recycled in the worst way.
If someone ever actually makes a full show using AI, it might be an interesting novelty, but it'll also clearly be operating above its grasp.
I don't think it'll ever work like you giving it a script and out comes something good. There's too much distance and intelligence between the words and a good result.
Instead, you'll be able to film a movie with cardboard props and have the AI make it look real. The director himself will be able to play every character and make them look and sound like actual different people.
Yeah, as a development milestone of a new tool, it's possibly interesting. Honestly it doesn't even seem significantly different from a lot of other demos in terms of capability though.
As a product in and of itself, this looks like absolute garbage, nonsense scenes with levitating men, characters popping out of existence randomly, weird animation artifacts all over.
The most interesting part was seeing how the curse of hands apparently also applies to door handles too.
AI will always be inbred. Each time I see it I see something a teenage tracer would do on dA.