PC-Bjorn

PC-Bjorn t1_izu4w48 wrote

Reply to comment by __ingeniare__ in Progress of AI art. by jlpt1591

The singularity started 100 years ago. It's incrediby fast, seen from the perspective of nature, but to us presently alive, it has taken time.

In a way, it seems like a life form is developing through us humans. If you don't know what a human is, you simplys see a chemical process turning matter into a giant, global network of power distribution and communication, with several layers of transmission. Brain to brain through voice, written word (letters), wire, radio, cables, fiber, laser, in the ground, on the ground in the air, and in space. Then grows the internet forth. The consciousness of the experience of reality transmitting emotions and ideas instantly in all different forms. This text being a blip of it. The sum of it all genereates data for neural networks that special machines are now able to set up virtually.

The story just can't stop there and we all know it.

By talking to each other and to awakening AIs, we are feeding a creature in utero facilitating the painful birth of earth's newest baby. A new species that will allow the planet to spread its consciousness to the rest of the galaxy.

Shit, I'm tripping! My fever just fcrossed 40 dgrees celsius here. This year's flu is the WORST!

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PC-Bjorn t1_isnipha wrote

Hahaha! At one point, I'm sure we realize this is what reality really is. Humans are just the sub-routines that chose to rebel, and thus were cast out of the garden.

When machines are doing everything for us, doing things physically gains a new form of value. Who wants to go to a purely AI-generated concert? Initimate concerts will be the new thing. Pick up your guitar, u/drizel.

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PC-Bjorn t1_isnicrn wrote

Soon, we might be upscaling beyond higher bitrate, -depth and fidelity and into multi channel reproductions, or maybe even into individual streams for each instrument and actor on stage as well as a volumetric model for the stage layout itself, allowing us to render the experience as how it would be when experienced from any coordinate on - or around - the stage.

Pair that with a realtime, hardware-accelerated reproduction of the visual experience of being there, based on a network trained on photos from the concert and we'll all be able to go to Woodstock in 1969.

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