Accurate AF
Posts by Pablo Saravanja
I’m going with AI because of the appearance of a regurgitated stone moving in slow motion on the closeup.
The deafening silence speaks volumes 😆 Audible it is!
Does anyone enjoy using Headway? It seems to oversimplify complex ideas to the point where it loses the depth and nuance that made the original books worth reading in the first place. I’ve reviewed three books and would rate the whole thing as a 2-star experience. I’m curious to hear your thoughts.
I’ve tried both but topaz won me over in November with a 50% off annual for their Photo AI, Video AI and Gigapixel. Seemed like a bargain, but I don’t really use it as much as I thought I would. I should probably cancel before I forget.
Except as per the example, nobody would ever see it.
Canadian TV is what happens when you give Twin Peaks the budget of a Tim Hortons gift card and swap out the supernatural for a polite dog helping someone fix a snowblower.
Canadian TV Exec: Ok, it’s Lassie, but the dog has severe commitment issues! He rolls into your small town, solves oddly specific low-stakes problems, and is gone before you get too clingy. Every episode ends with 🐕 saying, “My work here is done, don’t make it weird.”
Thanks for sharing, Andrew. Did you make this? I just want to acknowledge the source for reposts.
It’s killing me not knowing
That’s all I needed to hear to renew my subscription!
A glowing futuristic orb sits inside an ancient-looking vessel within a cave, with the word "Intelligence" inscribed in bold letters on its surface. The vessel, made of weathered stone, is engraved with intricate patterns and partially covered in moss. The orb emits a bright neon glow in shades of blue and purple, illuminating both the vessel and the surrounding cave interior. A team of futuristic archaeologists, equipped with advanced tools and gear, stands cautiously at the cave entrance, observing the artifact with a mix of awe and caution. The atmosphere blends ancient mystery with futuristic exploration, set against the backdrop of a dense jungle outside the cave.
Artifacts of tomorrow will symbolize our present, echoing through history as reminders of our time. What we produce today will represent our civilization, shrouded in mystery. Future generations will marvel at our creations, reflecting on the lives and values of a world they can barely comprehend.
A glowing futuristic orb sits inside an ancient-looking vessel within a cave, with the word "Intelligence" inscribed in bold letters on its surface. The vessel, made of weathered stone, is engraved with intricate patterns and partially covered in moss. The orb emits a bright neon glow in shades of blue and purple, illuminating both the vessel and the surrounding cave interior. A team of futuristic archaeologists, equipped with advanced tools and gear, stands cautiously at the cave entrance, observing the artifact with a mix of awe and caution. The atmosphere blends ancient mystery with futuristic exploration, set against the backdrop of a dense jungle outside the cave.
Artifacts of tomorrow will symbolize our present, echoing through history as reminders of our time. What we produce today will represent our civilization, shrouded in mystery. Future generations will marvel at our creations, reflecting on the lives and values of a world they can barely comprehend.
So I have to pick? I love both!
I'm glad the internet has progressed beyond the importance of fax machines. Otherwise, I would have to send this comment to you via carrier pigeon, as Canada Post workers are currently on strike!
Got that Jodorowsky vibe!
Don’t mind if I do. How’s about 8634?
Thanks for the tip!
That’s rather impressive, thanks for sharing @gabemichael.ai
Same, bro. Definitely same 🫠
Notes: I used ChatGPT & DALL-E to reimagine/illustrate a real Daily Mail article on internet skepticism blending human ideas with AI creativity for an artist critique of past-tense tech-story predictions. #AIArt #InternetHistory #DigitalArt #TechCritique #Nostalgia #ethicalAI #AIgenerated #hindsight
It estimates that in Britain alone three million people have stopped using the Internet altogether. Most users found the web slow and time-consuming.
The findings will dismay Internet enthusiasts who had hoped the medium would revolutionize the way people live and work. They are based on four years of research funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, Europe’s biggest social science organization.
Steve Woolgar, director of the society, said: “Despite the Internet, telephone calls, face-to-face meetings and traditional paper documents still dominate the everyday life of most organizations. New technologies offer new forms of communication, but what people want to do remains much the same.”
They said attempts to sell goods over the web had been largely unsuccessful, with the most popular form of online shopping still based around airline tickets.
They said e-mail, far from transforming communication, was often seen as more trouble than it was worth. Many other forms of communication were regarded as more effective. Experts from the Virtual Society think-tank who published the findings concluded: The Internet is not changing everyone’s lives.
Daily Mail
Tuesday, December 5, 2000
By James Chapman, Science Correspondent
The Internet may be only a passing fad for many users, according to a report.
Researchers found that millions were turning their back on the web, disillusioned by its limitations or unwilling to pay high access charges.
Looking back, this take seems absurdly naive. The “passing fad,” bulldozed every aspect of life, fueling global communication, commerce, education, and culture. The internet exploded reshaping entire economies and industries, completely changing the world and everyone in it, forever. #hindsight #AI
Weird please!