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 Generative AI


A million people on DALL-E's waitlist will get access to the AI image generator

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Those waiting for a chance to use DALL-E may soon get their turn. The powerful AI tool that generates images based on provided text will open in beta to one million users on the waitlist, OpenAI, the company that created DALL-E, announced today. Users enter a phrase or string of words into DALL-E, and the tool returns its own interpretation in the form of four images, ranging from whimsical to hyperreal. An updated DALL-E 2, launched in April, added the ability to edit existing images. A bowl of soup that is a portal to another dimension as digital art pic.twitter.com/vDbUpJoRWz


OpenAI is ready to sell DALL-E to its first million customers

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A DALL-E beta subscription won't break the bank: $15 buys you 115 credits, and one credit lets you submit a text prompt to the AI, which returns four images at a time. On top of this, users get 50 free credits in their first month and 15 free credits a month after that. Still, with users typically generating dozens of images at a time and keeping only the best, power users could soon burn through that quota. In the lead-up to this launch, OpenAI has been working with early adopters to troubleshoot the tool. The first wave of users has produced a steady stream of surreal and striking images: mash-ups of cute animals, pictures that imitate the style of real photographers with eerie accuracy, mood boards for restaurants and sneaker designs.


DALL-E's powerful AI image generator is now available in beta

Engadget

You no longer have to be part of a small club to try OpenAI's clever DALL-E image generator. The consortium has launched a beta that will make DALL-E available to 1 million people from a waitlist in the weeks ahead. If you get in, you'll receive 50 free image credits in your first month and 15 every following month. Each credit offers four pictures based on one original prompt, or three if you offer an edit or variation prompt. A bundle of 115 credits is available for $15 if the freebies aren't enough.


Surreal or too real? Breathtaking AI tool DALL-E takes its images to a bigger stage

NPR Technology

DALL-E2, the AI image tool, generated these images of a giraffe shopping in a grocery store. When the Silicon Valley research lab OpenAI unveiled DALL-E earlier this year, it wowed the internet. The tool is seen as one of the most advanced artificial intelligence systems for creating images in the world. Type a description, and DALL-E instantly produces professional-looking art or hyperrealistic photographs. "It's incredibly powerful," said Hany Farid, a digital forensics expert at the University of California, Berkeley.


Pixelz AI Art Generator

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Developers and mathematicians around the world have come together in an open source community to create the base algorithmic libraries that are used by pixelz.ai. We have taken the incredible foundation built by VQGAN CLIP and PYTTI to make it possible for the masses to use these algorithms to generate artistic styled imagery and videos! We have written a custom implementation of the popular DALL ยท E hyper-realistic algorithm called PXL ยท E to enable users to create realistic imagery from text. Their awesome work can be found on the DALL ยท E mini repo. As we develop and improve Pixelz AI we are adding in proprietary algorithms, models, training data and more almost daily.


DALL-E 2, the future of AI research, and OpenAI's business model

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This article is part of our coverage of the latest in AI research. Artificial intelligence research lab OpenAI made headlines again, this time with DALL-E 2, a machine learning model that can generate stunning images from text descriptions. DALL-E 2 builds on the success of its predecessor DALL-E and improves the quality and resolution of the output images thanks to advanced deep learning techniques. The announcement of DALL-E 2 was accompanied by a social media campaign by OpenAI's engineers and its CEO, Sam Altman, who shared wonderful photos created by the generative machine learning model on Twitter. DALL-E 2 shows how far the AI research community has come toward harnessing the power of deep learning and addressing some of its limits.


Inside Midjourney, The Generative Art AI That Rivals DALL-E

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The "Content and Moderation" section of Midjourny's user guide instructs users to "not create images or use text prompts that are inherently disrespectful, aggressive, or otherwise abusive," and to "avoid making visually shocking or disturbing content" including adult content and gore. The rules also forbid content that "can be viewed as racist, homophobic, disturbing, or in some way derogatory to a community," including "offensive images of celebrities or public figures."


This AI image generator lets you type in words and get weird pictures back

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It only took Matt Laming, a 19-year-old from the United Kingdom, about a month to hit a million followers on Twitter. And all it required was sharing a steady stream of the most outlandish computer-generated images that he and a bunch of internet strangers could think up. In recent weeks, the digital marketing apprentice, better known online as @weirddalle, has shared images depicting things like people vacuuming in the forest, the Demogorgon from Netflix's "Stranger Things" holding a basketball, and a Beanie Baby that looks a lot like Danny DeVito. These and other pictures, which range from ridiculous to disturbing, were created with a freely available artificial intelligence system called Craiyon. To use it, you just type what you'd like it to envision -- "A rainbow lion eating a slice of pizza" -- and it will spit out pictures in response.


AI artwork is difficult the boundaries of curation - Channel969

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In only a few years, the variety of artworks produced by self-described AI artists has dramatically elevated. A few of these works have been offered by giant public sale homes for dizzying costs and have discovered their manner into prestigious curated collections. Initially spearheaded by a couple of technologically educated artists who adopted pc programming as a part of their artistic course of, AI artwork has just lately been embraced by the lots, as picture technology expertise has grow to be each simpler and simpler to make use of with out coding abilities. The AI artwork motion rides on the coattails of technical progress in pc imaginative and prescient, a analysis space devoted to designing algorithms that may course of significant visible info. A subclass of pc imaginative and prescient algorithms, known as generative fashions, occupies heart stage on this story.


An experimental horror ARG is testing the boundaries of AI art

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According to ancient Nine Inch Nails (NIN) lore, we're living in Year Zero, which began on February 10th, 2022. It's a period of extreme dystopia, where a fundamentalist religious government oversees an omniscient Bureau of Morality and a strange phenomenon known as "The Presence" -- two massive spectral arms reaching from the sky -- is spotted across the country. Year Zero was an alternate reality game (ARG) that accompanied the NIN album of the same name, and it included events that immersed fans in a theocratic police state. It was designed by 42 Entertainment, which also made Halo 2's I Love Bees ARG and Last Call Poker for Activision's Gun. The game began in February 2007 at the tail end of a "golden age" for commercial ARGs, which included an Audi campaign, ARG companions to major TV shows, and an "interactive clothing" company.