- cross-posted to:
- ai_@lemmy.world
- ai_art@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- ai_@lemmy.world
- ai_art@lemmy.world
I’m torn. The images look cool and it’s amazing they can do that, but I sure hope it didn’t become trendy to make QR codes that are hard to recognize and can only be read in ideal conditions.
I have a QR code framed and hanging on the wall in my foyer for guest wifi access. I am definitely going to artsy it up like this so it looks nicer on my wall. People who want wifi will ask and I’ll just tell them to scan that picture. They’re usually impressed by that now; I’m excited to see how they react when they don’t even recognize that it’s a QR code.
Next we make this landscape in the world so people can scan it if they are at the exact right angle. Then 100’s of years later some Indiana Jones type will use it to open a door to the holy grail.
The QR codes are neat, but using that technique for hidden text or just artistic shapes can get a whole lot more trippy:
In other news, AI generated movie trailers are starting to look really good:
How about AI generated Animes? Corridor Crew also published video with in depth explanations on what they did, and I think even published tutorials
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
How about AI generated Animes?
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
All I see is Rob Gonsalves, his artstyle looks very similar.
While I’ve seen these before, I find this hard to believe this isn’t a screenshot from The Witness (2016).