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Nvidia's upgraded AI art tool turned my obscure squiggles into a masterpiece | PC Gamer - wallsfackon

Nvidia's upgraded AI artistry tool turned my obscure squiggles into a chef-d'oeuvre

The Nvidia Canvas software being used on a touch screen laptop
(Image credit: Nvidia)

IT's marvelous, the things we throne suffice with AI nowadays. For artists looking to integrate AI into their work flow, there are ever more modern tools popping up all finished the net. One such tool is Nvidia Canvas, which has just been updated with the more powerful GauGAN2 AI, to replace the primary GauGAN model, along with loads of new features.

The Nvidia Canvas software program is available for unblock to anyone with an Nvidia RTX graphics card. This is because the software uses the tensor cores present in your GPU to let the Artificial intelligence do IT's line of work.

If you've not had a go, IT fundamentally involves scribbling blobs onto the left canvas with brushes starred 'gravel,' 'cloud,' or 'water' while the Bradypus tridactylus translates those blobs into a landscape on the right.

This new update sees a few more options in terms of brushes added, such as 'flower' and 'straw.' The potency of the brushes was e'er partially underage happening your skill as an artist, but the AI too retributive got a little bit more advanced to facilitate fill whatsoever creative voids.

A recent GauGAN2 browser demo proved that to Nvidia's latest AI, a project is Charles Frederick Worth not a thousand, but fair-minded a few comfortably-placed words. In seconds, the AI posterior translate a linguistic string into a photorealistic image, and bring round life any vague concept that you yourself could barely envisage.

Image generated with gaugan2

(Image credit: Nvidia)

This gorgeous scene was generated only from the words "rocky outcropping overlooking a stream in a afforest." Thanks to the 10 million landscape images Nvidia had previously fed the AI using the Selene supercomputer, an imaginary, even highly believable landscape was born.

Now that the Nvidia Canvas software program has been updated to run on the GauGAN2 model AI, we thought we'd put IT direct IT's paces. That elbow room you can make up one's mind if it's worth a go before downloading IT.

For the first trial run, I made attempts to reconstruct a landscape painting visualize I found just in case anyone designed to role the tool to overcome copywrite restrictions (because you can't copywrite the shape of nature). The image on the left is the found image, and the one on the right is my attempt to basically plagiarise nature.

Image generated with gaugan2 side by side with reference image

(Prototype mention: Nvidia)

Okay, it's not the greatest copy, but the Artificial intelligence did try its best with my eldritch scrawling. The main hurdle for it seemed to be exfoliation and deepness. Check over the trees on high of the cliff—they're meant to be far away but zero matter how small I ready-made the dots, the Army Intelligence couldn't quite an make the scale conservative.

So, perhaps GauGAN2 is not the best at trying to rip off actual images by painting them anew. However, with some nudging and no puny come of imaging, I managed to produce a vague reflection of the image. With this single, you give the sack leastways make out the basic composition.

Image painted with gaugan2, and generated result

(Image credit: Nvidia)

On that point we go; much less like a trippy-ass Salvidor Dali painting. It did take a shrimpy work to get the AI to understand what I was look to do, just with the utilize of the layer feature and a lot of make around, I feel like the result could pass every bit an actual exposure, taken on this plane of existence.

I think the issue before was in my attempting to copy it shoetree-for-tree.

Image painted with gaugan2, and generated result

(Image credit: Nvidia)

Beat entirely, it's a really fun software to play around with. The Army Intelligence even managed to exposure-do something believable from my silly, amorphous scribblings, which is quite impressive. Nonnegative, it's generated in 4x high resolution that of the previous AI, so you can exportation 1024x1024 images now. I just wish it would let me design landscapes in landscape, really.

So while it's not quite a the 4K screen background background designer we were looking for, it's still very impressive, and I can't wait to get wind what the next iteration stern Doctor of Osteopathy. The Nvidia Canvas computer software is available for gratuitous present, and will work for anyone with an Nvidia RTX graphics card.

Katie Wickens

Screw sports, Katie would rather watch Intel, AMD and Nvidia start at it. She can often be found admiring AI advancements, sighing over semiconductors, OR gawping at the latest GPU upgrades. She's been obsessed with computers and graphics since she was teeny-weeny, and took Game Art and Design capable Masters unwavering at uni. Her thirst for absurd Razz Pi projects will never be sated, and she will stop at nothing to spread internet safety awareness—dispirited with the hackers.

Source: https://www.pcgamer.com/nvidias-upgraded-ai-art-tool-turned-my-obscure-squiggles-into-a-masterpiece/

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