Liked on YouTube: OpenAI’s ChatGPT is a MASSIVE step forward in Generative AI

ChatGPT is the latest GPT style generative AI model from OpenAI, which, at it’s most basic level acts as a chatbot, but this back and forth structure allows for many complex capabilities.

Chat with ChatGPT here: https://bit.ly/3BIFWL5

Operating system example with the script writing to a file: https://twitter.com/Sentdex/status/1600609223548739585?t=3KJw_yb6hPjDNbQoI27ScA&s=19

Neural Networks from Scratch book: https://bit.ly/3VbrQZV
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Liked on YouTube: Revised: 3D Printing – 13 Things I Wish I Knew When I Got Started

Sale on GearBest Printers going on right now! https://bit.ly/3Yzy1JR

UPDATED COUPON CODE FOR TORNADO: GBTOR822 (links are below)

Whether you’re thinking about buying your first 3D Printer, learning to use your new 3D Printer or you’ve been at this for a while, in the next several minutes I’m going to teach you thirteen things about 3D Printing that took me a little while to really understand and hopefully they’ll save you some time.

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Use this coupon code at checkout: GBTOR822

More 3D printer coupons from Gearbest!: http://bit.ly/2plwlV4

LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS VIDEO:
• Tevo Tornado 3D Printer: https://goo.gl/iJvVAs
• Makers: The New Industrial Revolution: http://amzn.to/2rhtiB8
• 12-inch Mirror Tiles (pack of 6): http://amzn.to/2DEIhrp
• Hatchbox PLA Filament: http://amzn.to/2DbvCeh
• Hatchbox WOOD PLAFilament: http://amzn.to/2raok9c
• Sony PlayStation Eye Camera – these now cost $23 to $52, so I recommend using the Pi Camera instead: https://bit.ly/3Yz6U1F
• Wyze Cam WiFi Camera ($25): https://amzn.to/2WihNbR
• Sainsmart Flexible TPU Filament: http://amzn.to/2mF6Lsk
• Raspberry Pi 3 B (for OctoPi): http://amzn.to/2FsWb0Q
• OctoPi / OctoPrint setup and configuration: https://bit.ly/3PzdNfv
• Tevo Tornado Owners Group on Facebook: https://bit.ly/3YxRrPv….

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TWO FREE AUDIOBOOKS!
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00:00 Intro
02:00 #13: This is a Hobby
03:11 #12: Slicing Matters
04:26 #11: Print profiles
06:03 #10: Ironing
06:55 #9: Have a little help from your friends
08:21 #8: Materials matter
12:24 #7: Keep an eye on things
14:30 #6: Octoprint
16:58 #5: Understanding support
19:09 #4: Rafts, Brims & Skirts
22:37 #3: Get sticky (but only if you have to)
24:15 #2: Print on glass… or any good bed
26:08 #1: Bed leveling & The first layer squish

Liked on YouTube: I tricked an AI chatbot into being an immersive RPG…

In this video, I wanted to see the limits of what we can do with chatGPT when applied to narration for a text based roleplaying game.

If you want to use the prompt I’ve made, you can find it here:
https://bit.ly/3FZn1OI

To use the prompt, simply copy and paste the full text into the first message you sent to chatGPT at this link:
https://bit.ly/3uYkhLl

The real fun comes when you start changing the setting, prompt and other details about how you want the game to be run.

Happy Adventures.

Support me on Patreon: https://bit.ly/3YnE18y

Ai art

Regarding AI art – I use it (though mostly for conceptual stuff) and I don’t apologize for it.

Ot course it can be abused. I don’t think anybody’s saying it’s cool to intentionally direct a series of prompts to make it deviate from its standard style to fully emulate the work of a specific living artist instead of paying them, and allowing artists to opt out of their material being used as training is the right thing to do.

At the same time, there’s a lot of ignorance out there about how neural networks operate and how MidJourney’s plain, no-specific-artist-name-attached style prompt works. Please research it before you accuse the engine of inherently stealing everything it produces. As dumb as the far right looks when they inherently argue from ignorance, we don’t look much better when we say “computers can’t learn to make original content they can only steal!”

I’m by no means an expert on neural networks, but I happened to work on one as part of a college final project (though it was waaaay simpler than the neural networks that Stable Diffusion uses), so that means I know a little more than the average layperson. They are modeled after human brains for a reason — to process or (in this case) generate content they’ve never seen before based on what they learn from images they’ve seen in the past. So yes, this is absolutely similar to what humans do when they take images from the web to study and incorporate what they learn into their own style.

MidJourney’s default style (when you don’t directly emulate a specific artist) is a unique blend, and there’s nothing wrong or illegal about that. It is not a dice roll of “which exact style should I emulate from these art works?” — it’s its own cocktail. The signatures you sometimes see aren’t copied and pasted, they’re from the engine trying to imitate what it’s seen by signing it (honestly, that should probably be weeded out of the training data).

I’m sure there will be a lot of lawsuits around this in the future. I don’t know how the courts will rule on them, as human judges can be unpredictable even for the most apparently straightforward cases (read “Hello World” for a scary example), but there’s s good chance that if what the AI is doing isn’t illegal for a human to do (memorize publicly displayed art, file it away in their brain, incorporate some techniques from that art into part of their unique style) then it won’t be illegal at all.

The resolution I see will be to 1) block user prompts from directing the AI to emulate a specific style of any artist who hasn’t given permission, instead of using its default style or more general prompts like “hyperrealism”. And 2) allow artists to opt out of their material being used for training.

Regarding ai art

Regarding AI art – I use it (though mostly for conceptual stuff) and I don’t apologize for it.

Ot course it can be abused. I don’t think anybody’s saying it’s cool to intentionally direct a series of prompts to make it deviate from its standard style to fully emulate the work of a specific living artist instead of paying them, and allowing artists to opt out of their material being used as training is the right thing to do.

At the same time, there’s a lot of ignorance out there about how neural networks operate and how MidJourney’s plain, no-specific-artist-name-attached style prompt works. Please research it before you accuse the engine of inherently stealing everything it produces. As dumb as the far right looks when they inherently argue from ignorance, we don’t look much better when we say “computers can’t learn to make original content they can only steal!”

I’m by no means an expert on neural networks, but I happened to work on one as part of a college final project (though it was waaaay simpler than the neural networks that Stable Diffusion uses), so that means I know a little more than the average layperson. They are modeled after human brains for a reason — to process or (in this case) generate content they’ve never seen before based on what they learn from images they’ve seen in the past. So yes, this is absolutely similar to what humans do when they take images from the web to study and incorporate what they learn into their own style.

MidJourney’s default style (when you don’t directly emulate a specific artist) is a unique blend, and there’s nothing wrong or illegal about that. It is not a dice roll of “which exact style should I emulate from these art works?” — it’s its own cocktail. The signatures you sometimes see aren’t copied and pasted, they’re from the engine trying to imitate what it’s seen by signing it (honestly, that should probably be weeded out of the training data).

The resolution I see will be to 1) block user prompts from directing the AI to emulate a specific style of any artist who hasn’t given permission, instead of using its default style or more general prompts like “hyperrealism”. And 2) allow artists to opt out of their material being used for training.

I’m sure there will be a lot of lawsuits around this in the future. I don’t know how the courts will rule on them, as human judges can be unpredictable even for the most apparently straightforward cases (read “Hello World” for a scary example), but there’s s good chance that if what the AI is doing isn’t illegal for a human to do (memorize publicly displayed art, file it away in their brain, incorporate some techniques from that art into part of their unique style) then it won’t be illegal at all.