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Later, I opened my laptop to play around on deepdreamgenerator.com, an AI art generator with an emphasis on dreamlike images. I tried out AI image generation for the first time on this website for another article I wrote on HackerNoon a few days ago, and by now there were enough credits left for 3 default-quality images. Once my credits were done, I went to my email looking for what to do next. Lo and behold an email from HackerNoon with a link to try out their new embedded AI image generation tool.
“plant roots interweave and ants crawl across, it is like a highway for bugs” - prompt used for all images in this article
In this image, we now have a mix of styles between the elements: the soil is photo-realistic while the ants are cartoon-like. There are no roots visible which was one of the main features. Once again it seems the first image was the best, same as last time. The level of detail of the roots and the tiny hairs on them is similar to the grass tufts I was pulling out of the bricks. Despite the ants not being fully formed, they are overall more lifelike than the more anatomically correct subsequent images.
The deep dream generator is designed for people to describe their dreams and get corresponding images. This could be part of the reason why its AI seemed to get a better sense of the overall importance and size of the ants. This picture, generated on HackerNoon’s new tool, definitely looks the most realistic and would probably be the hardest to pick out as an AI-generated image (even though, when you take a closer look there is a blurry seam running down the right of the picture). But to be honest, it’s a pretty boring picture, the other ones are more interesting, and, frankly, that is what I want from my AI images: something strangely evocative and off-tilt that has a chance of sticking in a person’s head - the opposite of generic. 🌟