This strikes me as a robot dog for billionaires. To my thinking, this robot dog doesn't compare to a real dog - it has the advantages of not needing to be walked to take a dump at 7:00 am on a rainy Saturday morning - but the emotional rewards of a real dog crush this. It's a novelty at best.
The most hated episode of Black Mirror as far as I can tell. I thought it was fine.
It's hated? I thought it was middle of the road. Unsettling to watch, but not a standout in the entire series.
People were pretty hard on it at the time, for sure. I think they didn't like that it was more action than a thinker, I guess. People already feeling entitled over what they expect the show to be.
The most hated episode of Black Mirror as far as I can tell. I thought it was fine.
It's hated? I thought it was middle of the road. Unsettling to watch, but not a standout in the entire series.
People were pretty hard on it at the time, for sure. I think they didn't like that it was more action than a thinker, I guess. People already feeling entitled over what they expect the show to be.
Fans.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
So as someone unfamiliar with this subgenre how close is it?
I'd have assumed it was legit.
I like it, lets just put all the musicians out of business
It puts pressure on consumers to figure out what they want. Do they want something that allows them to connect with the human being that created it, or is it just surface hedonism? "The customer is always right" is being severely tested.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
So as someone unfamiliar with this subgenre how close is it?
I'd have assumed it was legit.
I like it, lets just put all the musicians out of business
It puts pressure on consumers to figure out what they want. Do they want something that allows them to connect with the human being that created it, or is it just surface hedonism? "The customer is always right" is being severely tested.
It also sets things up for "artists" to possibly cheat a little.
So as someone unfamiliar with this subgenre how close is it?
I'd have assumed it was legit.
I like it, lets just put all the musicians out of business
It puts pressure on consumers to figure out what they want. Do they want something that allows them to connect with the human being that created it, or is it just surface hedonism? "The customer is always right" is being severely tested.
It also sets things up for "artists" to possibly cheat a little.
I really don't see anything good coming from it.
Neither do I. There are some potential positive uses—Peter Jackson's Beatles documentary used AI to pull out voices, for example—but most of the possibilities are terrible.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
I like it, lets just put all the musicians out of business
It puts pressure on consumers to figure out what they want. Do they want something that allows them to connect with the human being that created it, or is it just surface hedonism? "The customer is always right" is being severely tested.
It also sets things up for "artists" to possibly cheat a little.
I really don't see anything good coming from it.
Neither do I. There are some potential positive uses—Peter Jackson's Beatles documentary used AI to pull out voices, for example—but most of the possibilities are terrible.
I didn't watch it. Is that where they made a song from some rough dems or something
I like it, lets just put all the musicians out of business
It puts pressure on consumers to figure out what they want. Do they want something that allows them to connect with the human being that created it, or is it just surface hedonism? "The customer is always right" is being severely tested.
It also sets things up for "artists" to possibly cheat a little.
I really don't see anything good coming from it.
Neither do I. There are some potential positive uses—Peter Jackson's Beatles documentary used AI to pull out voices, for example—but most of the possibilities are terrible.
I didn't watch it. Is that where they made a song from some rough dems or something
For the Get Back documentary, AI was used to lift out conversations from the scattered mikes, to clean them up for use in the movie. And then Paul used it to lift John's vocals for that "Beatles" single from last fall. So cleaning stuff up and isolating things, yeah, it has value that way … tho what gets done with the result could be terrible.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft