#310826
Posted 10 April 2023 - 21:53
F O R T H E N S
#310828
Posted 11 April 2023 - 06:34
F O R T H E N S
#310830
Posted 11 April 2023 - 10:33
#310831
Posted 11 April 2023 - 11:49
#310833
Posted 11 April 2023 - 15:02
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm
#310835
Posted 11 April 2023 - 15:07
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm
#310836
Posted 11 April 2023 - 16:53
Bob, on 11 April 2023 - 13:44, said:
I used ChatGPT quite a bit. My impression of it is that it is not AI. Just an advanced form of auto-fill.
There is no true AI yet. However, what those programs labelled as AI do, still impressive and a lot of jobs will be gone because of that.
I already stopped my career pursuing as a concept artist for the future. If the AI art creation this advanced in its infancy, there will be no need for most of the concept artists in video games. And i do not enjoy using the tool. (Maybe i will at some point just for the sake of better paying job)
We will approach to "soulless dystopian hi-tech style of living" sooner than anticipated. There might even be some countries completely banning those techs and stick to old way of living. Of course they will be taken over by the more efficient AI soon enough. That taking over part might be the only "fun" bit to watch, rest is soulless, deppressive misery.
#310837
Posted 11 April 2023 - 17:14
Bob, on 11 April 2023 - 13:44, said:
We've chatted about it at my writing group and one person is worried that it will blur the line between what is real in terms of writing (but then they write about all encomposing AI stuff so...).
Someone else generated some sci-fi clothing descriptions to see what it could do.
I got onboard the AI generation train early on by getting access to Dalle2 and just messing around with it. I've generated some surreal images as writing prompts for my writing group, which has been great fun.
I pitched creating a funny AI calendar at work, or perhaps using the AI generation software to created free stock imagery for us. One of our largest outgoings in design is imagery; not just paying for it, but constantly finding new images. My boss seems to find the AI image generation amusing but hasn't engaged with it. I fear we might be left behind if other companies catch on and begin to make calendars using these tools.
Personally I'm just going along for the ride because what else can we do? The idea of trying to stop new technology is ridiculous, we now just have to mitigate the risks. I believe AI generation will be the next 'internet' in terms of the impact it has on human society. We already can't trust what we read, soon we won't be able to trust anything we see. AI generated photos/videos will outnumber reality and it's going to be impossible to tell the difference.
Chyros, on 11 April 2023 - 15:02, said:
Welcome back!
wen pics of stolen holy hat ???
F O R T H E N S
#310838
#310840
Posted 11 April 2023 - 18:30
#310841
Posted 11 April 2023 - 21:24
Bob, on 11 April 2023 - 13:44, said:
I've used it...twice? Because my brain can't do math, I asked it to help me take off 100 seconds from 3 minutes, and display the remaining time in minutes.
I couldn't do it with a calculator because my brain just encounters a hard stop when trying to math
#310842
Posted 11 April 2023 - 21:24
General, on 11 April 2023 - 16:53, said:
Bob, on 11 April 2023 - 13:44, said:
I used ChatGPT quite a bit. My impression of it is that it is not AI. Just an advanced form of auto-fill.
There is no true AI yet. However, what those programs labelled as AI do, still impressive and a lot of jobs will be gone because of that.
I already stopped my career pursuing as a concept artist for the future. If the AI art creation this advanced in its infancy, there will be no need for most of the concept artists in video games. And i do not enjoy using the tool. (Maybe i will at some point just for the sake of better paying job)
We will approach to "soulless dystopian hi-tech style of living" sooner than anticipated. There might even be some countries completely banning those techs and stick to old way of living. Of course they will be taken over by the more efficient AI soon enough. That taking over part might be the only "fun" bit to watch, rest is soulless, deppressive misery.
TheDR, on 11 April 2023 - 17:14, said:
Bob, on 11 April 2023 - 13:44, said:
We've chatted about it at my writing group and one person is worried that it will blur the line between what is real in terms of writing (but then they write about all encomposing AI stuff so...).
Someone else generated some sci-fi clothing descriptions to see what it could do.
I got onboard the AI generation train early on by getting access to Dalle2 and just messing around with it. I've generated some surreal images as writing prompts for my writing group, which has been great fun.
I pitched creating a funny AI calendar at work, or perhaps using the AI generation software to created free stock imagery for us. One of our largest outgoings in design is imagery; not just paying for it, but constantly finding new images. My boss seems to find the AI image generation amusing but hasn't engaged with it. I fear we might be left behind if other companies catch on and begin to make calendars using these tools.
Personally I'm just going along for the ride because what else can we do? The idea of trying to stop new technology is ridiculous, we now just have to mitigate the risks. I believe AI generation will be the next 'internet' in terms of the impact it has on human society. We already can't trust what we read, soon we won't be able to trust anything we see. AI generated photos/videos will outnumber reality and it's going to be impossible to tell the difference.
It's pretty scary how quickly things are progressing. Within a couple of days of ChatGPT being released, it went from a fun novelty to it being an integral part of my workflow that I'll use multiple times a day, and that's the same for all the other devs at my work too.
I still remember one of the first things I got it to do. I wrote some dummy PHP code, that just counted up, I gave it no context for what the code did or what I expected to happen, I simply said "Why doesn't this work", and it figured out what I was expecting the code to do, and realised it was different to what the code was actually doing... And then fixed and commented the code. It wasn't a particularly difficult problem to fix for a human, but the fact it was able to connect several layers of logic together was just mind blowing. I think that's when I realised this was on par with the internet being invented. I've lost count of the number of (public) innovations that have been made since then that also feel like massive jumps in capabilities, and it doesn't seem to be slowing down any time soon. Even if AI dev is halted for 6 months like some people want, there are still so many things to be discovered GPT4 without even building a larger LLM.
6 months ago I not only would have thought my job was safe, but I wouldn't have even asked myself the question since it was so blindingly obvious that it was safe, to now thinking not only my job might not exist in a few years, but will the company I work for even exist in a few years? We're desperately trying to pivot to include AI in things we do, and maybe it will have short term benefits, but what will websites even look like in the not too distant future? A large chunk of the internet is just a way of presenting information to a user, but what incentive do they have to exist if all the information will just be scraped by a bot of some description and presented to a user via a chat or even a speech interface?
I'd like to think we're heading to some form of Star Trek utopia where people only work because they enjoy it, but best case scenario there's going to be a very difficult transitionary period with large scale unemployment and a small handful of people becoming even more insanely rich than they already are.
Edited by Bob, 11 April 2023 - 21:26.
#310843
Posted 11 April 2023 - 22:43
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm
#310844
Posted 12 April 2023 - 03:06
Bob, on 11 April 2023 - 21:24, said:
Utopia is impossible with this much population (Atleast a permanent or long term one) Even the best, wealthiest countries to live in have fundamental problems which are ready to explode on small disruptions.
Insanity is more rampant than people realize. Especially among developing or under-developed countries. There are millions of people in my relatively modern country which is ready to go on murder spree with a word from their leader.
Best case scenario would be universal basic income becoming global. Which will of course not be enough for anything but getting basic food. Perhaps could be used to enforce people to live in rural areas instead of stuffing themselves in major cities. Authoritarianism already rising worldwide in alarming degree, people still seem to repeat the mistakes of the past and learn nothing.
or i don't know shit and it will be better
Edited by General, 12 April 2023 - 04:04.
#310845
Posted 12 April 2023 - 13:36
Bob, on 11 April 2023 - 21:24, said:
This would be great except for the problem that we can't generate food like we can generate things from AI prompts
If we can provide unlimited food for the world, we can start becoming that utopia by only working when we enjoy it
#310846
Posted 12 April 2023 - 14:38
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm
#310847
Posted 12 April 2023 - 15:52
#310848
Posted 12 April 2023 - 16:17
Chyros, on 12 April 2023 - 14:38, said:
For younger people, it is.
It has quite tense gameplay though. Especially with gamepad (since it is a bit more difficult to aim)
It has a demo, you can try for yourself. Chainsaw dude is quite scary for first timers
#310849
Posted 12 April 2023 - 16:23
General, on 12 April 2023 - 16:17, said:
Chyros, on 12 April 2023 - 14:38, said:
For younger people, it is.
It has quite tense gameplay though. Especially with gamepad (since it is a bit more difficult to aim)
It has a demo, you can try for yourself. Chainsaw dude is quite scary for first timers
I guess there's not that many games that really are horror, let alone good horror. Games that allow you to go guns blazing are never really horror, and ones that are basd on jumpscares are just lame.
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm
#310850
Posted 12 April 2023 - 16:32
I am sure you would love dungeon part, it is quite short but it has one of the scariest gameplay i have ever played ( Sadly it is in mid-game and not in demo)
Also, it has horrible one-liners, the best
My only complain is that this scene is not in the game, probably they are scared of feminist backlash
Edited by General, 12 April 2023 - 16:36.
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