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I love this, great job! Do you have any plans to take it further?

Thanks! I'm open to suggestions, right now I'm improving the experience every day a little. It's also open-source[0] so contributions are welcome.

[0]: https://github.com/stagas/hallucinate


It would be nice if users could generate their own venues, maybe also use AI to convert text descriptions into venues, live events, (sponsored venues/events?), regular 'festivals' where the whole world changes: forest, desert, beach, etc

They can! Through AI and a PR :)

I'm looking forward to Opus 4.9

> a profound digital-ecological crisis

Yes, it's not a pretty sight to peer into the oracle and see how a society with gen-ai will pollute so much of the communications and interactions we take for granted.


The Photoshop 2.5 manual (1992) is a thing of beauty. It is like an introductory course in digital imaging, well structured, put together with care and expertise, it provided to me a fascinating introduction to (at the time for me) mind-blowing concepts in digital artwork. It explained the fundamental concepts in digital imaging that have remained with me ever since.

Yes, well put. You make a good case for not watching this movie. Your question 'why did the prompter create this film?' hints at a future of personalized AI movies that feels dangerously dystopian.

Do film critics ever 'dial it in' without properly (or actually) watching the film?

I love Mark Kermode as a critic, normally, but for his review of Triangle of Sadness (imo a great film!) I don't think he was paying attention, or was even there.

See here https://youtu.be/ciJnhGNPS60 am I right?


When David Lynch’s “Inland Empire” first came out, my friend invited me to come with for a screening. The film had barely started when I heard a loud snore in the empty cinema: he had fallen asleep. Woke up a couple of minutes before the credits rolled. The review was published a couple of days later - it was as good and engagingly written as it could be, and if I didn’t know, I’d never have guessed he just actually slept through it all.


After sales slumped in the 70s they created a disastrous advertising campaign which is a case study in customer alienation: effectively 'drink Schlitz or I'll kill you' :-

https://youtu.be/hC8mqPLHDVU

https://youtu.be/f_baloTGt5M


Wilkins Coffee (which gave employment to a young Jim Henson before Sesame Street or The Muppet Show) was quite successful with its implication that people who don't drink Wilkins get shot and suffer other misfortunes. Maybe having puppets do it was just more charming.

https://youtu.be/HVewx3-9x24


Those seem pretty ordinary by beer commercial standards.

Advertising didn't kill Schlitz. They made some processing changes to their formula that caused a micro infection. Not sure, could have been Pediococcus. But they did it all at once, and ruined so many batches, that customers left and never came back.


That's not my read of the message of those ads at all.


See

Oh, Schlitz: How a Historic Ad Campaign Helped Kill America’s Biggest Beer Brand

https://vinepair.com/articles/schlitz-history-ad-campaign


I wonder if that type of article would exist if they had made good brewery decisions before launching the commercials. I mean they aren't great commercials, but I don't know I'd compare them to the unabomber or call it the brand killer. The brand was already killed, the commercials just weren't great.


If the brand had taken off and recovered the advertisers would claim "daring and powerful commercials that saved the brand" - the one thing they can't admit is that advertising isn't terribly effective.


Got any recommendations?

I don't really have any complaints about this list, but I would include:

The Castle - Franz Kafka

American Tabloid - James Ellroy

The Inheritors - William Golding

American Pastoral - Philip Roth

The Big Sleep - Raymond Chandler


Haha tricky one. Presumably AI will get better at mimicking humaness - including being weird when called for. Then we'll have to exhibit increasingly strange and divergent qualities in order to signpost our biological origin?


I sometimes use the 200MP mode on my phone - it does render more detail in images and sometimes that's what I want.

To counter the unnatural look of noise reduction I often add a film grain effect.


Film grain is great for dealing with crappy noise reduction, but I found no good fix for oversharpening yet. Gaussian blur doesn't do it.


Yes, good point. When I look at prints from the 200MP files I like the amount of detail, but the sharpening is quite obvious.


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