And what country can preserve its liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
Will they bother with animation or cartoons when AI boosted films can do the same things with (seeming) real life? Starring any actor that lives or has lived.
I don't think so. So much animation (particularly anime) is computer generated/assisted, and that won't change any time soon. There's a paradoxical difference between animation and AI. We know the samuri shown above aren't real and the movements are exaggerated, but because it's obviously animated, it's accepted for what it is. AI on the other hand, no matter how well done, will always be a known fake, and there will always be some repulsion from the viewer because of this. An example of this paradox can be found in Isaac Asimov's Robots and Federation books where the robots, no matter how sophisticated they behaved, as long as they looked robotic, were generally accepted (or at least tolerated), while the one robot that looked human had to keep that fact hidden or risk being destroyed by people. -lg
Will they bother with animation or cartoons when AI boosted films can do the same things with (seeming) real life? Starring any actor that lives or has lived.
ReplyDeleteI don't think so. So much animation (particularly anime) is computer generated/assisted, and that won't change any time soon.
DeleteThere's a paradoxical difference between animation and AI. We know the samuri shown above aren't real and the movements are exaggerated, but because it's obviously animated, it's accepted for what it is. AI on the other hand, no matter how well done, will always be a known fake, and there will always be some repulsion from the viewer because of this.
An example of this paradox can be found in Isaac Asimov's Robots and Federation books where the robots, no matter how sophisticated they behaved, as long as they looked robotic, were generally accepted (or at least tolerated), while the one robot that looked human had to keep that fact hidden or risk being destroyed by people.
-lg
Because cartoons are often better than movies. No "acting" involved.
ReplyDeleteshe burst through the door with a pair of .44's ...and a gun in each hand.
ReplyDeleteha
Delete