SORA – Things just got a lot more complicated.

Open AI’s new platform, SORA is mind bendingly crazy beautiful. The platform (model) was developed to create realistic… and I mean realistic… scenes from text. The current model can produce video up to one minute long, which is long enough to change reality. The SORA model was released to the RED TEAMERS, who will weigh in on the safety, risks & Harm aspects of releasing this to the wild. This, I think will be difficult to identify good vs. evil, for every mouse trap there is a smarter mouse.

Currently, the SORA platform has been handed out to a few artists, designers, filmographers, etc. Open AI is showing the public early work to give us a sense of the capabilities of what is on the horizon.

Click on the image below, but ONLY AFTER reading the prompt that was fed into the model to create this imagery. Crazy simple…..

Prompt: A stylish woman walks down a Tokyo street filled with warm glowing neon and animated city signage. She wears a black leather jacket, a long red dress, and black boots, and carries a black purse. She wears sunglasses and red lipstick. She walks confidently and casually. The street is damp and reflective, creating a mirror effect of the colorful lights. Many pedestrians walk about.

There are so many aspects of this video that you need to take in by watching this several times. My favorite… the skin detail and startling attention to detail in the reflection off her sunglasses.

There will be those who say, ‘Why would someone even develop these capabilities? It’s just going to lead to further chaos!”

Leave that question to rattle around for the binary talking heads. In the meantime, I commend OpenAI for sharing this, early. AI is already here–it’s not going away and I would hate to see a bit placed in the mouth of AI, catering to the least common denominator; we did not get to the moon without taking a risk.

I am betting that these developments in AI will provide a platform for humanity to advance–just like the calculators did in the 70’s, when the fear they would dumb down our engineering capabilities never happened. These are tools for humanity–time for humanity to stop staring at the glass for what is seen and see it for what it is. The medical, engineering, theatrical aspects, etc. are game changers.

Mystic Men

It seems like OMD’s song “Maid of Orleans” and how it might have been overlooked is not uncommon; many significant events, whether in music, art, or other fields, can sometimes be overlooked or not receive the recognition they deserve in their time.

When I heard this song back in 1981, I was living in Noank, CT with my best friend, George (God rest his Soul). We were different in many ways but loved the same music. Whenever I listen to this song, I am transported back to that small town, living hand to mouth, opting to ride my bicycle to work to save on gas (~$1.35/gal) and spending what little we earned on music and drinking at Chucks until closing, failing miserably to pick up girls. But in our defense, I don’t think it was us, personally. You see, we smelled like fish 24×7, having worked at Mystic Aquarium. But wandering home from Chucks, four-sets of taillights in our vision, we left our “ducks” on the front porch, where even the stray cats stayed away from our boots. After a shower and change of clothes, one of us would slip on a white glove and remove an album from our collective stash then spin music finto the late morning (for medicinal reasons).

Excerpt from “Mystic Men” (WIP)

In memory of George “Gil” Lavigueur – Sept. 27, 1957 – May 13th, 2012

My best friend

The day everything began to unwind,the color of the water around Fort Wetherhill in Jamestown, RI was a Payne’s Grey.  I remember that because it was the same color as the sky and there was no horizon line for either.   To say it was cold that morning was an understatement.  The sky felt as heavy as lead and If the cove had remained still for even a minute it would have frozen over.  

I remember it being the first day of January because we had just celebrated 1981 the night before, closing Chucks as usual. Leaving alone as usual, not remembering how we got home, as usual.

Diving was a great way to work off a hangover and while the recreational diver was at home on a day like this, drinking their coffee in front of the fireplace and watching reruns of Jacque Cousteau, George and I were about to enter the water on the western side of the hill. We were the real deal; Marine Biologists making $10,000 a year before taxes.  We stopped off at a coffee shop on the way, ordering two black coffees, each; one for us the drink, the other to pour into our wetsuit just before we entered the water…..