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WWW.TECHRADAR.COMThe role storage plays in the AI data cycleThe AI industrys growth drives demand for efficient, scalable storage, creating a "virtuous AI data cycle."0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 10 Views
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WWW.TECHRADAR.COMHelp shield yourself from cyber threats this Black Friday with up to AU$160 off Norton 360For a limited time, you can score a year of Norton 360 from only AU$59.99.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 10 Views
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WWW.CNBC.COMIndonesia wants Apple to sweeten its $100 million proposal as tech giant lobbies for iPhone 16 salesThe Indonesian government expects Apple to invest more than $100 million into the country if it wants to sell its iPhone 16 in the growing market.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 11 Views
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WWW.CNBC.COMBluesky CEO Jay Graber says X rival is 'billionaire proof'Bluesky CEO Jay Graber told CNBC that the social media app's open design could thwart potential acquisition efforts.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 10 Views
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WWW.FACEBOOK.COMBe a cursed prince frog and use your tongue as a grapple to bounce around levels in this 2D hand-drawn platformer, whose art has...Be a cursed prince frog and use your tongue as a grapple to bounce around levels in this 2D hand-drawn platformer, whose art has been presented by artists who have worked on Cuphead and the Rick & Morty show. Wishlist: https://80.lv/articles/be-a-cursed-prince-frog-with-a-powerful-tongue-in-this-2d-hand-drawn-platformer/0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 28 Views
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WWW.FACEBOOK.COMTake a look at these Arcane-esque 3D character facial rigs set up by Senior Animator Ramon Arango in MayaTake a look at these Arcane-esque 3D character facial rigs set up by Senior Animator Ramon Arango in Maya.Available soon via Gumroad: https://80.lv/articles/check-out-these-2d-like-3d-facial-rigs-with-arcane-vibes/0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 27 Views
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WWW.FASTCOMPANY.COMThese 4fantastic sites offer more than 17,000 free online coursesThe kids are back in school, the year is winding down, and maybejust maybeyoure finding yourself with a teeny, tiny bit of extra time on your hands.Instead of plopping down in front of the TV or running your phones battery dry on social media, why not expand your educational horizons?Whether youre looking to learn a new skill, advance your career, or simply satisfy your curiosity, these four platforms offer some of the best free online courses available.CourseraWith north of 5,000 free courses to choose from, Coursera offers one of the largest collections of learning content online.The site partners more than 300 universities and companies to offer educational content across a broad range of disciplines.While certificates require payment, the majority of course content remains freely accessible via the sites audit option.edXFounded by Harvard and MIT, edX hosts more than 4,000 courses, with around 1,000 available to audit for free.The catalog includes everything from introductory courses to advanced professional certificates, though like Coursera, certificates and graded assignments require payment.The course selection covers the full academic spectrum, but skews toward the sciences and engineering.FutureLearnFutureLearn offers limited access to around 1,400 of its courses.The catch? Lessons covered by the freebie plan are doled out on a weekly basis instead of being available all at oncewhich might actually be a nice cadence if youre looking to learn at a more leisurely pace.The course catalog spans an impressive range of subjects, but with particular strength in humanities, healthcare, and technology.Khan AcademyNon-profit Khan Academys commitment to completely free education makes it unique among the major learning platforms.The sites strong focus on STEM subjects covers a wide variety of material for school-aged learners, although theres still plenty here for those whove graduated from backpacks to briefcases.More than 10,000 video lessons are available here, and theyve got a reputation for clarity and concise explanations, making complex topics accessible to learners of all levels.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 10 Views
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WWW.FASTCOMPANY.COMThese artists are rebranding AI image generation with a new nameAlmost two years ago, the Berlin-based artist Boris Eldagsen made the headlines after winning the prestigious Sony World Photography Award with an AI-generated image, then rejecting the award. AI is not photography. Therefore I will not accept the award, he wrote on his website. In a separate statement made a week later, he added an important question:But what is it?When AI image-generation programs like Midjourney and DALL-E went mainstream, people making images using AI jumped to the closest associations they had: AI photography or AI-generated art. But making an image using AI is a different process that deserves a different word. Eldagsens suggestion? Promptography.Over the past few years, the word promptography has been slowly gaining traction. The hashtag #promptography has been used more than 80,000 times on Instagram. An increasing number of artists are now using it to tag images they make using AI. Some, like Montreal-based artist Stefanie Lefebvre or the Swedish artist Annika Nordenskild are even calling themselves promptographers on their Instagram bios. Here, we unpack the growing trend. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Annika Nordenskild (@annikanordenskiold)Whats in a name?Peruvian photographer Christian Vince first coined the word promptography in a Facebook post following Eldagsens resignation from the Sony Award. As Vince recalls it, Eldagsen then reached out and asked him for permission to borrow the term. I think its an appropriate term to define photorealistic images created with prompts, says Vince.Eldagsen, who studied philosophy on top of visual arts, told me that some objects and processes need proper terminology in order to enable discussion, so he was thrilled when Vince put forward promptography. Some artists have been using syntography to describe images generated with AI, but Eldagsen says the word is too redolent of the synthetic clothes he wore in the 70s for it to resonate. Promptography is clear, because everything that is generated needs to start with a prompt because AI has no intentionality, AI has no will, he says. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Amber and Rose (@amber.and.rose_ai)The reason promptography works so well, in his opinion, is because it so clearly describes the process. While photography involves a person venturing out into the world, pointing a camera, and capturing a real moment in time, an AI image involves a person sitting in front of a computer, shaping words into images. The act of pointing, once described by John Szarkowski, a former director of photography at New Yorks Museum of Modern Art, has become the act of prompting. And by describing AI-generated images as promptographs, we are telling people the difference. You wouldnt call a photorealistic painting photography, he says. Apples are not potatoes.An image from Secret Cars: 300 Promptographs by Mr. Franois [Image: Franois Mercier/courtesy Luster]According to Belgian film director Francois Mercier, who goes by the nickname Mr. Francois, the dissonance goes all the way back to the etymology of the word. If we break it down, the word photography comes from the Greek words phts (meaning light) and graph (meaning drawing or writing). The word literally translates to drawing with light, and as Mercier points out: That doesnt quite fit AI-generated images, does it?[Cover Image: courtesy Luster]Mercier recently published a book of 300 promptographsthats the word he used. In the book, titled Secret Cars, he used Midjourney to imagine alternate realities in which Lamborghini makes a school bus, or Ferrari makes a motor home. He says the word promptography reflects the way people make images using AI: not with light, but with a prompt. Prompting is the craft, he says.A misunderstood process in need of a rebrand?The problem is, many people dont consider generating images using AI as craft, and a word like AI-generated photography doesnt sound very alluring. Aside from being inaccurate, it is clunky, undignified, and it completely removes the human from the equation. Could a new label help elevate the craft?According to artist Marcus Wallinder, whose once peppy, now dark and surreal style has been profoundly reshaped by AI, the word promptography gives the process a sense of intentionality and artistry, which helps to differentiate it from the idea that AI-generated images are effortless. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Marcus Wallinder (@meanwhileinnowhere)On top of the knowledge required to describe styles or art movements, artists working with AI often spend hours crafting, iterating, and fine-tuning their prompts, and sometimes hours more editing and polishing the final image. Eldagsen likens the process to that of a mixologist creating an advanced cocktail. Pentagram partner and author of Artificial Typography, Andrea Trabucco-Campos, likened it to that of an art director or a curator.For Wallinder, the process is akin to being the set designer, lighting technician, costume designer, makeup artist, props master, and stylistall rolled into one, he says. While AI brings unpredictability, its my responsibility to shape that unpredictability into a cohesive and compelling vision. Only time will tell whether the word will actually stick or if the majority of artists will continue using other catch-all terms. For those who remain opposed to AI, the word might not matter. As one artist put it on Instagram: A Promptographer is someone that pretends to be a photographer, while knowing nothing about photography or its principles, but instead uses AI to do all of the work and takes all of the credit.Maybe the word promptographer is too close to the word photographer and the proximity, too insulting. But the rise of promptographer does seem to reflect a growing acceptance of AI as a legitimate artistic tool, as Wallinder puts it. The ultimate test, I suppose, will be if the word ever makes it into theOxford English Dictionary.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 11 Views
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WWW.DEZEEN.COMMakhno Studio creates breathable clay panels to improve indoor air qualityUkrainian architecture practice Makhno Studio has developed a range of textured clay panels for use as insulation and interior decoration that naturally regulate humidity.The Breathable Walls projectwas inspired by traditional Ukrainian mazanka houses, plastered using clay mixed with manure or other organic materials.Makhno Studio has developed clay wall panelsContemporary trends for wellness and sustainability prompted architect Sergey Makhno and his team to explore potential applications of this building method in contemporary contexts."This is what our ancestors did for dozens of generations to make the house 'breathe' and the walls 'heal'," Makhno pointed out.The panels are made from Ukrainian white clay mixed with plant materials"This is the most natural and recreational solution I know," he added. "And these are specifically Ukrainian traditions that we have rethought, adapted to modern times and brought a new interpretation."The products are based on two decades of experimentation with clay in the studio's architecture projects, including an apartment in Kyiv that Makhno designed for his own family.Read: Makhno Studio celebrates Ukrainian craft in all-beige home near KyivMakhno Studio uses Ukrainian white clay, which used to be mined in the city of Slovyansk until it was occupied by Russian troops. The material is now sourced from elsewhere in Ukraine.The clay is mixed with natural additives and fillers including flax, barley, nettle, lemon balm and wood shavings before being shaped into panels and bricks that are air-dried to retain the material's natural properties.According to Makhno, the products respond to a demand for living spaces with more natural qualities, offering respite from what he calls the "environmental, electromagnetic, informational and psycho-emotional pollution" that many city dwellers are exposed to.The material can also be formed into bricksThe wall panels have hygroscopic qualities, meaning they can naturally regulate air humidity and temperature by acting as insulation. Makhno claims they can even improve the microclimate of a space by absorbing harmful substances such as dust and microorganisms.He also claims the plant-based elements in the clay mixture could enhance wellbeing by releasing restorative aromas and natural oils into the air.The products are currently made to order in Makhno Studio's workshop and can be customised in various shapes and sizes, as well as offering different options for additives.Makhno Studio says its Breathable Walls can regulate indoor air qualityThe project is influenced by Makhno's fascination with the architecture and culture of Japan, where similar clay wall decoration has been used for centuries.The architect's main residence in Kozin, south of Kyiv, is also informed by his travels to Japan and features a Japanese-style garden filled with sculptures as well as shelves covered with a large collection of Ukrainian ceramics.The Breathable Walls project features on the shortlist for Dezeen Awards 2024 in the surface design category. Also on the shortlist is a pair of archways constructed by architecture practice Studio RAP using 3,000 unique 3D-printed tiles.The post Makhno Studio creates breathable clay panels to improve indoor air quality appeared first on Dezeen.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 10 Views