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we're not kids anymore.

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Cosimo Galluzzi

pixel skylines
One Nice Bug Per Day
dirt enthusiast
Game of Thrones Daily

Origami Around

tannertan36
ojovivo

Love Begins

oozey mess
Three Goblin Art

#extradirty
i don't do bad sauce passes

No title available

Janaina Medeiros

Product Placement
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@garbagioarmani
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yc2bfEYNY7w)
Arigatou Gozaimasu
We're on the edge of a new frontier in art and creativity -- and it's not human. Blaise Agüera y Arcas, principal scientist at Google, works with deep neural networks for machine perception and distributed learning. In this captivating demo, he shows how neural nets trained to recognize images can be run in reverse, to generate them. The results: spectacular, hallucinatory collages (and poems!) that defy categorization. "Perception and creativity are very intimately connected," Agüera y Arcas says. "Any creature, any being that is able to do perceptual acts is also able to create."
I feel like I’m on a high.
In 2014, researchers used traps and cameras to try to determine how many Bramble Cay melomys were left on a tiny outcrop in the Great Barrier Reef. They found none.