Correct. And this can be ruled out, even if we already used photonic computing for everything, even if every single cent would be spent on such a project (World wide, of course). Just researching the required musical and psychoacoustic parameters for model finetuning would require decades and insane amounts of money. It would be easier to colonize Mars with genetically enhanced humans who wouldn't die from complications caused by radiation and low gravity. And that is already out of reach.VitaminD wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 1:07 am I think we'll need some kind of AI tool that is designed and trained on a simulation of physical models of real instruments in a simulation of a physical room (size, materials, air pressure) that simulates a player to some degree. Then somehow let it 'explore' all possibilities to get new sonic elements. Then we'll need it to be able to give the AI tool a specific human personality in order for it to understand what is musically appealing and what is not.
I really get those vibes again when people in the 80s and 90s said that we're going to have flying cars in 2000 when talking to AI fans. Physics? Not an issue! Engineering? Star Trek! Very simple minds.

