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Hugoalb sadi
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Have you ever seen a polar bear playing bass? Or a robot painted like a Picasso?

Didn’t think so. DALL-E 2 is a new AI system from OpenAI that can take simple text
descriptions like, “a koala dunking a basketball” and turn them into photorealistic
images that have never
existed before. DALL-E 2 can also realistically edit and retouch photos. Based on a
simple natural language description,n fill in or replace part of an image with AI-
generated imagery that blends seamlessly with the original. It’s called “in-
painting”. In January 2021, OpenAI introduced DALL-E, a system that could generate
images from text, like this “Avocado Armchair”. DALL-E 2 takes the technology even
further with higher resolution, greater comprehension, and new capabilities like
in-painting. It can even start with an image as an input and create variations with
different angles and styles.
DALL-E was created by training a neural network on images and their text
descriptions. Through deep learning, it not only understands individual objects,
like koala bears and motorcycles, but learns from relationships between objects.
And when you ask DALL-E for an image of a koala bear riding a motorcycle, it knows
how to create that or anything else with a relationship to another object or
action. The DALL-E research has three main outcomes: First, it can help people
express themselves visually in ways they may not have been able to before. Second,
an AI-generated image can tell us a lot about whether the system understands us, or
is just repeating what it has been taught.Third, DALL-E helps humans understand how
advanced AI systems see and understand our
world.This is a critical part of developing AI that’s useful and safe. The
technology is constantly evolving, and DALL-E 2 has limitations. If it’s taught
with objects that are incorrectly labeled, like a plane labeled “car”, and a user
tries to generate a car, DALL-E may create…a plane. It’s like talking to a person
who learned the wrong word for something. DALL-E can also be limited by gaps in its
training. For example, if you type “baboon” and DALL-E has learned what a baboon is
through images and accurate labels, it will generate a lot of great baboons. But if
you type “howler monkey” and it hasn't learned what a howler monkey is, DALL-E will
give you its best idea of what it thinks it could be: like a “howling monkey”.
What's exciting about the approach used to train DALL-E is that it can take what it
learned from a variety of other labeled images and then apply it to a new image.
Given a picture of a monkey, DALL-E can infer what it would look like doing
something it's never done before. Like paying its taxes, while wearing a funny
hat.DALL-E is an example of how imaginative humans and clever systems can work
together to make new things – amplifying our creative potential.

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