random.dude@mastodon wrote:Good news: AI will achieve human levels of intelligence next year!
Bad news: This will not happen as a result of improvements to AI.
Maybe there is a way to fix the AI problem!? (Let's talk about how we can handle this sh*t)
- KVRAF
- 16779 posts since 8 Mar, 2005 from Utrecht, Holland
We are the KVR collective. Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated. 
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
- GRRRRRRR!
- 17684 posts since 14 Jun, 2001 from Somewhere you're not!
I think you are operating under the assumption that people want to take the best possible photos but, as award winning professional photographer Chase Jarvis famously said, "the best camera is the one you have with you". Even someone like him understands that getting the shot is more important than getting the best shot. By the time you get your DSLR out of your rucksack, take it out of its case and take the lens cover off, Bigfoot is going to be long gone. You can always fix a bad photo in post but if you don't get the shot in the first place, you 've got nothing. It's a very different discipline to music or painting or most other forms of art.zerocrossing wrote: Tue Nov 11, 2025 1:45 amConsumer cameras have been around for a very long time. The only thing adding them to a phone did was create more photos, but if you're actually interested in taking a really good photo, I don't care what phone you own, a good DSLR or mirrorless is going to do a way better job, and someone who's studied how to use them is going to do better than a person who doesn't.
That's not art, though, you could say the same about the guy who built your house or fixes your car. He'd take a better photo with your phone than you could, too.When my daughter was 3, we took her to a professional photographer and got photos that would blow away anything I could take of her, and I studied photography in high school and college.
That ship has sailed. Have you seen some of the things video AIs are doing? They can take an almost completely side-on shot of someone and create a video where they turn to face the camera and the face is close enough to perfect as makes no difference. It's freaky.I think AI represents a very different paradigm than the camera, though. It's one thing to go to a studio photographer and have them do a session with a person and to tell a computer to generate images of my daughter from a sample image.
That's what a professional photographer does, they snap literally hundreds of shots to get the half-a-dozen or so good ones they can use. Portrait photos, of course, are different because they can take as much time as they like setting it up so it's exactly right, but so can anyone.Will it stumble upon a few images that look good? Maybe
Which, of course, is precisely where "the phone you have with you" excels. What I notice about prof portraits is the for most of them, it's the only time in that person's life they will ever look that good. It's not a realistic snapshot of a person, it's about as fake as it gets.what I want is to capture a moment of my daughter's life. This is the time, this is the record of the time, sort of thing.
I find it excellent for doing all the technical shit I can't be bothered with, like setting up the dynamic EQ to get the best out of the limiter and that kind of schizz. The Mastering Assistant gets it to a point where I can take over, creatively, to get the result I want, knowing that the technical stuff is taken care of. I've been using it since Ozone 8 and I find I always get better results than using my old mastering tools (in Adobe Audition and, before that, SoundForge). Of course, the more I do it, the better I get at it (hopefully), so there might be a bit of that as well.I once tried iZotope's plugin and I basically had to go in and manually fix what it thought was "good." Maybe it's gotten better. Not sure.
Yeah, don't believe everything you see on YouTube. There's another video that suggests the no download thing only applies where you have used specific artists in your prompts (i.e. artists signed to Universal). The gist of that video is that they are trying to stop people from making money from fakes, not to stop people from making their own original music. Fans will still be able to do their music fan fiction stuff, they just won't be able to commercialise it. What will happen, of course, is that the scam artists will just move to another AI platform and continue their scammery. It will be years before it gets cleaned up properly.bermudagold wrote: Tue Nov 11, 2025 5:08 am @BONES...so how do you feel now that you've been inspired by it if it all goes away cause of record labels?
viewtopic.php?p=9154088#p9154088
Anyway, we're not using Udio and I am now reasonably confident we won't be releasing any AI generated music as such - just taking it, deconstructing it and rebuilding it in a DAW - so it's irrelevant to us. I already have three songs in a usable state, although they still have AI vocals. We'll be adding my dulcet tones soon enough, then we'll know if the whole thig is going to work or not. If it doesn't and we do revert to releasing the AI versions, we will be giving them away on Bandcamp, so there'll be no money involved. It will be a purely promotional tool to try to raise our profile a bit.
Of course it can, once the lighting is set up, you can use whatever f**king camera you like to take the picture and if you use the manual settings on your phone's camera, you can have as much control over the result, too. The only thing you're stuck with is the lens (or lenses) that come with your phone, so you might not be able to frame it as well, although it's likely you'll just have to take the picture from much closer to get the right framing.chagzuki wrote: Tue Nov 11, 2025 2:05 pmProfessional photographers have lighting setups (and know how to use them), that's the part that can't be replicated by consumer smartphone cameras.
Phone cameras are all about the software. When I bought my current phone, the low-light pictures were pretty bad but after I'd had it a year or so, it got a software update and now it takes night shots that are as good as any camera I've seen.Having said that, I would imagine AI will easily be able to simulate those soft shadow lighting effects.
That's not to say that you have correctly apportioned the blame. I would suggest social media is pretty much completely and utterly to blame, not the internet itself and certainly not AI.
NOVAkILL : Legion GO, AMD Z1x, 16GB RAM, Win11 | Audient EVO 8 | Lumi Keys | Studio Pro 8
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
- GRRRRRRR!
- 17684 posts since 14 Jun, 2001 from Somewhere you're not!
That's an interesting thought because, career or otherwise, music absolutely, completely and utterly defines my life, far moreso than my actual career(s) ever could. Motion Designer is what I do, half of NOVAkILL is who I am.ghettosynth wrote: Tue Nov 11, 2025 9:25 pmAlmost none of you will ever have a career in music that can define your life, let it go.
It never is, my friend, it never is.AI has many problems, but it is the most useful tech we've seen in decades, perhaps centuries. If you can't see that, it might not be the tech that is the problem.
NOVAkILL : Legion GO, AMD Z1x, 16GB RAM, Win11 | Audient EVO 8 | Lumi Keys | Studio Pro 8
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
- KVRAF
- 16779 posts since 8 Mar, 2005 from Utrecht, Holland
You know what that first word means, Warren? Never mind, I'll explain it.Almost none of you
It means you should not take offense and shut up if you're that exception to the stated rule.
We have some members who can't even decide on their artist name, for decades.
That type of dude is far in the majority, and you know it.
We are the KVR collective. Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated. 
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
- KVRAF
- 18337 posts since 26 Jun, 2006 from San Francisco Bay Area
Sure, but comparing the lenses and CCD or CMOS chip on the best smartphone to what’s on a professional camera is vast. AI can compensate for some of the shortcomings, but getting details in the darker areas of an image can’t be replaced by AI, unless pure digital conjecture is fine with you.chagzuki wrote: Tue Nov 11, 2025 2:05 pmProfessional photographers have lighting setups (and know how to use them), that's the part that can't be replicated by consumer smartphone cameras.zerocrossing wrote: Tue Nov 11, 2025 1:45 am Consumer cameras have been around for a very long time. The only thing adding them to a phone did was create more photos, but if you're actually interested in taking a really good photo, I don't care what phone you own, a good DSLR or mirrorless is going to do a way better job, and someone who's studied how to use them is going to do better than a person who doesn't. When my daughter was 3, we took her to a professional photographer and got photos that would blow away anything I could take of her, and I studied photography in high school and college.
I think AI represents a very different paradigm than the camera, though. It's one thing to go to a studio photographer and have them do a session with a person and to tell a computer to generate images of my daughter from a sample image. Will it stumble upon a few images that look good? Maybe, but that's not really the point, because what I want is to capture a moment of my daughter's life. This is the time, this is the record of the time, sort of thing. But AI can be useful on a phone when it takes multiple frames and applies an algorithm to them to form a composite image that's better than a single frame. I see my iPhone doing that all the time. I could see mastering a track being done with AI, though I once tried iZotope's plugin and I basically had to go in and manually fix what it thought was "good." Maybe it's gotten better. Not sure.
Having said that, I would imagine AI will easily be able to simulate those soft shadow lighting effects. It's already simulating the renaissance painting type styles which also use those lighting effects (invented them) and generating stylised images based on photographs of people.
That’s what’s going to separate the wheat from the chaff in the future of art. If you’re fine with a digital guess of what you might want, you might enjoy AI models, but if you’re after something specific, you will be frustrated. The time I tried to use Midjourney for some concept art, it was a resounding failure. I got a ton of cool images from it, but nothing that satisfied my requirements. I ended up just modeling the concept in Maya and using it as a reference for a digital painting using Procreate. I would have saved myself some time if I’d just spent the whole time doing it myself.
Zerocrossing Media
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
- KVRAF
- 18337 posts since 26 Jun, 2006 from San Francisco Bay Area
America has always had a strong anti-intellectual faction. I think what you’re observing is just easier to see due to social media, though now has less stigma than in the past. It used to be more regional, so what was happening in your community might be vastly different from the town one over. It’s now being promoted by the federal government, for the first time ever, so maybe the numbers are growing. One thing I always laugh about is when people in power put down the “elites,” when they are graduates of elite universities, and sending their children to those universities.
Zerocrossing Media
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
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- KVRAF
- 3399 posts since 26 Mar, 2002 from london
Yeah, the degree or method of control of the AI is crucial to real-world applications, so presumably that's where all the growth will be. Using a prompt alone is way too basic for most use cases, but once the AI interacts with an artist's pencil input, that will be a humongous augmentation.zerocrossing wrote: Wed Nov 12, 2025 6:15 pm That’s what’s going to separate the wheat from the chaff in the future of art. If you’re fine with a digital guess of what you might want, you might enjoy AI models, but if you’re after something specific, you will be frustrated. The time I tried to use Midjourney for some concept art, it was a resounding failure. I got a ton of cool images from it, but nothing that satisfied my requirements. I ended up just modeling the concept in Maya and using it as a reference for a digital painting using Procreate. I would have saved myself some time if I’d just spent the whole time doing it myself.
Every day takes figuring out all over again how to f#ckin’ live.
- KVRAF
- 11950 posts since 31 Aug, 2013 from Someplace else
A part, I suppose. But I know a fair number of young people and they can’t even write in cursive, and are utterly clueless. The actual studious ones out there will either go into computers or business, which doesn’t really address their specialization myopia. Fewer and fewer students are getting degrees in art and the Humanities.zerocrossing wrote: Wed Nov 12, 2025 6:26 pmAmerica has always had a strong anti-intellectual faction. I think what you’re observing is just easier to see due to social media, though now has less stigma than in the past. It used to be more regional, so what was happening in your community might be vastly different from the town one over. It’s now being promoted by the federal government, for the first time ever, so maybe the numbers are growing. One thing I always laugh about is when people in power put down the “elites,” when they are graduates of elite universities, and sending their children to those universities.
The young people I know are gamers. Maybe they can get gigs in the army for drone warfare.
“The Generals sat, and the lines on the map, moved from side to side.”
― Pink Floyd
― Pink Floyd
- addled muppet weed
- 111237 posts since 26 Jan, 2003 from through the looking glass
or they could control robots...Bombadil wrote: Wed Nov 12, 2025 6:55 pm
The young people I know are gamers. Maybe they can get gigs in the army for drone warfare.
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- KVRist
- 141 posts since 6 Oct, 2018 from Alpen
To be fair, neither can I any more and I'm in my 50s. I struggle to even sign my name. Thirty years of keyboard use...
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- KVRian
- 1028 posts since 15 Feb, 2005
so we have AI charting on billboard now...first genre to do it?...country and gospel
The prompters of Breaking Rust have another "artist" called WD-40, a rapper BTW! lol
The prompters of Breaking Rust have another "artist" called WD-40, a rapper BTW! lol
Music had a one night stand with sound design.....And the condom broke
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- KVRAF
- 16724 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
Sometimes. Sometimes I tell it to f**k right off with its dumb take on shit.VOODOO U wrote: Wed Nov 12, 2025 8:11 pm At the expense of going OT a bit, does anyone else say "Thank You" to Chatgpt when you're done asking questions? I think I'm too much of a nice guy.
- KVRian
- 1146 posts since 20 Oct, 2023
I'm not talking about BONES. I'm talking about Chatgpt.ghettosynth wrote: Thu Nov 13, 2025 4:36 am Sometimes I tell it to f**k right off with its dumb take on shit.