Tag: generator
Best Portable Generator of May 2023 – CNET
How to use Midjourney: The popular AI image generator
We Tried Google’s New AI Music Generator, Here’s the Best and Worst It Made
The generative AI revolution of 2023 continues this week, with Google releasing its AI music maker into public beta. The company announced MusicLM back in January, and it’s capable of creating 19-second musical clips from text prompts. Think of it as the ChatGPT for music.
Read This Article on Review Geek ›
Turning a Stocks and Shares ISA into a £40,000 annual passive income generator
Charlie Carman explains how he’d approach replacing an entire salary with tax-free dividend income from a Stocks and Shares ISA.
The post Turning a Stocks and Shares ISA into a £40,000 annual passive income generator appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
Stability AI’s New ‘XL’ Is a Super Powered Deepfake Generator for Businesses
As more companies realize it costs quite a bit to create generative AI content, we may be coming to the end of free, open source AI models. One of the biggest companies that once proclaimed open source from the rooftops to all that would hear is quickly trying to sell a bigger, badder, more deep fake-capable AI model…
OpenAI looks beyond diffusion with ‘consistency’-based image generator
The field of image generation moves quickly. Though the diffusion models used by popular tools like Midjourney and Stable Diffusion may seem like the best we’ve got, the next thing is always coming — and OpenAI might have hit on it with “consistency models,” which can already do simple tasks an order of magnitude faster […]
OpenAI looks beyond diffusion with ‘consistency’-based image generator by Devin Coldewey originally published on TechCrunch
Microsoft’s rolling out Edge’s AI image generator to everyone
Microsoft is making its DALL-E-powered AI image generator “available on desktop for Edge users around the world.” The company announced it’d be coming last month when it integrated the image generation tech into its Bing chatbot, but this move could make it available to a much wider audience.
When it rolls out — I and two other Verge staffers using Edge don’t appear to have access to it yet — the “Image Creator” will live in Edge’s sidebar. Using it should be pretty simple; you type in what you want to see, and Bing will generate several images that match the prompt. Then, you can download the ones you like and use them however you need.
In a Thursday blog post, Microsoft pitches the feature as a way to create “very specific” visuals…