One of the most highly-anticipated AI-related products has just arrived: OpenAI's AI video generator Sora launchedon Monday as part of the company's 12 Days of OpenAIevent.
OpenAI has provided sneak peeks at Sora's output in the past. But,Crime Archives how different is it at launch? OpenAI has certainly been hard at work to update and improve its AI video generator in preparation for its public launch.
YouTuber Marques Brownlee had a first look at Sora, releasing his video review of the latest OpenAI product hours before OpenAI even officially announced the launch. What did Brownlee think?
According to Brownlee, his Sora testing found that the AI video generator excels at creating landscapes. AI generated overhead, drone-like shots of nature or famous landscapes look just like real-life stock footage. Of course, as Brownlee points out, if you are specifically well-versed in how the surroundings of a landmark look, one might be able to spot the differences. However, there's not too much that looks distinctly AI-generated in these types of Sora-created clips.
SEE ALSO: How to try OpenAI's Sora right nowPerhaps the type of video Sora is best able to create, according to Brownlee, are abstract videos. Background or screensaver type abstract art can be made quite well by Sora even with specific instructions.
Brownlee also found that Sora-generated certain types of animated content, like stop-motion or claymation type animation, look passable at times as the sometimes jerky movements that still plague AI video look like stylistic choices.
SEE ALSO: 7 wild Sora videos blowing up social media after its launchMost surprisingly, Brownlee found that Sora was able to handle very specific animated text visuals. Words often show up as garbled text in other AI image and video generation models. With Sora, Brownlee found that as long as the text was specific, say a few words on title card, Sora was able to generate the visual with correct spelling.
Sora, however, still presents many of the same problems that all AI video generators that came before it have struggled with.
SEE ALSO: OpenAI's Sora is officially hereThe first thing Brownlee mentions is object permanence. Sora has issues with displaying, say, a specific object in an individual's hand throughout the runtime of the video. Sometimes the object will move or just suddenly disappear. Just like with AI text, Sora's AI video suffers from hallucinations.
Which brings Brownlee to Sora's biggest problem: Physics in general. Photorealistic video seems to be quite challenging for Sora because it can't just seem to get movement down right. A person simply walking will start slowing down or speeding up in unnatural ways. Body parts or objects will suddenly warp into something completely different at times as well.
And, while Brownlee did mention those improvements with text, unless you are getting very specific, Sora still garbles the spelling of any sort of background text like you might see on buildings or street signs.
Sora is very much an ongoing work, as OpenAI shared during the launch. While it may offer a step up from other AI video generators, it's clear that there are just some areas where all AI video models are going to find challenging.
Topics Artificial Intelligence OpenAI
The Angel of Forgetfulness by Tracy DaughertyDonald Trump's bizarre walk down a ramp is a big thing now: #RampGateThe Late, Great Theodora Keogh by Joan SchenkarA Week in Culture: Tom Nissley, Writer and GameDummy Land by Avi Steinberg'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for April 25Cats, Dogs, Men, Women, Ninnies & Clowns by Roz Chast'Shadowbanned' tweets are now officially labeled on TwitterTed Cruz and Ron Perlman are in a strange Twitter fight about ... wrestling?New Beats Studio Buds+ earbuds will come in new, transparent colorNearly 25,000 Twitter users pay to subscribe to Elon Musk's exclusive tweets'Atlanta's Missing and Murdered: The Lost Children' HBO Doc: ReviewViral TikTok comments showcase zoomers expertly dunking on millennialsCathy Park Hong on 'Engine Empire' by Robyn Creswell'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for April 26New Beats Studio Buds+ earbuds will come in new, transparent colorStieg's Stockholm by Elisabeth DonnellyPolaroids by Misty WoodfordStaff Picks: Microstyle, The Epiplectic Bicycle by The Paris ReviewFacebook defends letting Trump spread misinformation on mail NYT's The Mini crossword answers for June 9 MacOS 15 Sequoia brings iPhone mirroring to the Mac Meteor shower this week: Everything you need to know about tau Herculids NASA spacecraft zooms over Jupiter's swirling clouds at 131,000 mph M3 MacBook Air is $200 off and at a record low price Mars dust devils leave wild tracks all over Martian crater The fat bear 2022 cams are live and baby, WE GOT BEARS Bangladesh vs. Netherlands 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for free Renault to develop cheaper EV batteries with CATL, LG Energy · TechNode NASA demonstrates power of Webb telescope with Spitzer comparison United States vs. Ireland 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for free Resilient star survives a giant supernova explosion Tesla, Huawei, Xiaomi introduce new incentives as China’s EV price war continues · TechNode Kuaishou and Douyin both see e 20+ best early Father's Day deals 2024 Watch NASA video of total lunar eclipse from space Xiaomi and MediaTek announce first joint lab, unveil next WWDC 2024: Apple revamps Siri with a bunch of AI features Apple Intelligence: Apple announces new era of AI WWDC 2024: AirPods will let you accept calls by nodding
2.7498s , 8231.3203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Crime Archives】,Evergreen Information Network