Existing generative tools can automate a wide range of creative tasks and offer almost instant gratification, but at what cost? Some artists and researchers fear that such technology can make us passive consumers of even more AI Slop.
And therefore, they are looking for ways to inject human creativity into the process: work on what is known as co-creativity or creativity rather than human. The idea is that AI can be used to inspire or criticize creative projects, helping people do things they would not have done for themselves.
The objective is to develop artificial intelligence tools that increase our creativity instead of removing us, sending us to be better to compose music, develop games, design toys and much more, and lay the foundations for a future in which humans and machines create things together.
Ultimately, generative models could offer artists and designers a completely new medium, pressing them to do things that could not have been done before and give all creative super powers. Read the complete story.
—It will be the sky of Douglas
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Tariffs are bad news for batteries
Since Donald Trump announced his plans to sweep tariffs last week, vibrations have been, in a word, chaotic. Markets have seen one of the fastest falls in the last century, and it is widely expected that global economic order can be changed forever.
These rates could be particularly difficult for the battery industry. China dominates the entire supply chain and is subject to monster rates, and even US battery manufacturers will not escape the effects. Read the complete story.
– Casey Crownhart