Loading...

An experimental tool by Shaobo Guan generates realistic photos of people. You can alter gender, age, race, and some facial details. StyleGAN from Nvidia is one of many similar tools. There's even "Hot or Not"!

An algorithm by Tom White draws abstract illustrations of real world objects. It's trained on photos and the result is close to usable in real products. It's a part of Google Artists and Machine Learning initiative (read its blog).

This bot generates images from caption-like text descriptions. It can be everything from ordinary pastoral scenes, such as grazing livestock, to the absurd, such as a floating double-decker bus.

Another Sensei experiment that selects and tracks an object in a video. I.e. you can put a text behind a dancer. See more MAX 2018 announces (Smooth Operator and Good Bones are the best).

IBM designers created a practical guide for designers & developers for building and using AI systems.

The AI looks for three types of manipulation: cloning, splicing and removal. See also their new research and a checklist by Kyle McDonald.

Christopher Noessel analyzed sci-fi movies to understand how they portray AI. He published a comparison table.

David Dao made a curated list to track current scary usages of AI — hoping to raise awareness to its misuses in society.

Dávid Pásztor aims to create useful, easy-to-understand products in order to bring clarity to this shady new world of machine learning. Most importantly, we want to use the power of AI to make people’s lives easier and more joyful.