Star Wars in 1923 Using MidJourney and Pika Labs AI software, videographer Doggy Pledger created images of what Star Wars would have looked like if it had been filmed in 1923.
Deepfake from a single photo Researchers from Samsung's labs have developed a way to create high-resolution deepfakes, from a photo or even a painting. It's called MegaPortraits, and the team says it solved a particularly difficult problem when displaying its image "driver" is quite different from the source animation. For example, an effective Angelina Jolie deepfake is much more difficult to handle, when he is a man with short hair.
Collective hysteria after a hole in one at the Phoenix Open Sam Ryder caused collective hysteria at the Phoenix Open by scoring a "hole in one" in front of 20,000 furious people on the mythical hole of the "Coliseum". One of the shortest holes on the course at 162 yards (148m), a star attraction which is surrounded by a grandstand.
Two series of Starlink satellites meet No, these are not UFOs. Have you ever wondered what Elon Musk's Starlink satellites that fly at an altitude of 550 kilometers look like?, you can watch this video. The creator of the video claims that this is not a time-lapse but a real-time video. The two rows of satellites fly a little higher than each other. If you want to see when they will pass over where you are, you can visit the https page://james.darpinian.com/satellites/
Digital video mimics Morgan Freeman A hypnotic video created with the artificial intelligence of deepfake, and imitates actor Morgan Freeman. The class of deep learning algorithms called Generative Adversarial Networks (BY), is the main engine of deepfakes development. The faces created by GAN are almost impossible to distinguish from real faces.