I hoped to use the voice cloner however that requires a subscription so while I was here I figured I'd take Invideo AI for a spin.
This is like a stripped down version of OpenAI's SORA. With a simple prompt Invideo grabs stock video from various stock image purveyors and tells a basic narrative itself creates. My prompt was, "A hacker takes a long drag of a cigarette before exhaling slowly."
It asked who my audience is, my ideal tone, and general mood. Here's what it came up with:
The cool thing about Invideo AI is how it allows people with paid accounts to edit the video and audio to their liking. If you don't like a particular stock footage used you can select it, edit it out, select from a database of alternative stock videos to replace it with. A handy tool. And one we're sure to see continue being used in the future.
It's a fun curiosity. Might throw down for a subscription for the voice cloning.
Sadly, no cigarette was in this. And while smoking is harmful to ones health and causes cancer I'm quite fine with outsourcing that aesthetic to machines who can neither see nor breath nor have ever seen a human.
What would that look like? Eh. Something like this which PixVerse generated using a still image I made of with pre-alpha build of MidJourney's Niji 6. Best of the bunch, mind you. There were many failures before generating this.
PixVerse's generation was after trying Runway AI's Gen 2. These were "the best".
Sometimes the output is interesting. Here's an output from Runway back in August 2023. First the original generation from MidJourney sometime in mid-2023:

Now the August 2023 video generation:
Recursion upon recursion after recursion.
Before I end I want to make a quick note about SORA. It's largely doing the same thing Invideo AI is doing with a little extra pizazz. It only appears more advanced than it actually is due to some clever rendering and depth accounted for diffusion. SORA will one day be a powerhouse player. At launch, it's mostly smoke and mirrors.
Fun Fact: The OpenAI pigeon video caught a copywrite strike on YouTube because of the footage from Shutterstock.
In case it's lost. This comparison is here for posterity.
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