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The Morning After: Did Sony just reveal the PS5 Pro design?
Sony shared a first glimpse of its plans to celebrate PlayStation's 30th anniversary, and it seems PS5 Pro is coming to the party. Its decorative logo includes an image of the rumored upgrade to the current-gen PS5 console. Zoom between the S of the PlayStation logo and the 3, to reveal a different rectangle to the PS5s that appears elsewhere. The main change appears to be a differently proportioned console -- if this is the Pro, it'll be shorter than the OG PS5 -- and have more stripes across the body, making it look a lot like the PS5 Pro rendering leaked in late August. Adobe's Photoshop can now generate AI images via prompts like Dall-E or Midjourney You can get these reports delivered daily direct to your inbox.
Here's Everything Sony Just Announced at the PlayStation E3 Show
After Microsoft's Sunday afternoon salvo for its 4K-angled Xbox One X games console (and rejoinder to rival Sony's boutique PlayStation 4 Pro), it was Sony's turn to argue the case for its PlayStation platform suite. Sony Interactive Entertainment boss Shawn Layden took the stage to fete the company's software lineup. "We have an even more diverse range of blockbuster games coming soon," he said. "PlayStation is home to all the biggest and best franchises in the world." And then he vanished, making way for an hour of riveting game trailers intended to express the company's confidence in what it views as its brand's broad and idiosyncratic mix of gaming experiences.
Sony Just Created Two Pop Songs Using Artificial Intelligence
Artificial intelligence image by Sean Davis, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC by 2.0) Sony announced last week at they have created two brand new pop songs. While this doesn't appear to be a great feat at first, they've actually done this using artificial intelligence. Check out the first song titled Daddy's Car created in the style of The Beatles. This song was created over at Sony CSL Research Laboratory using their Flow Machines software. How does it work, exactly?