Quick Draw Game might be a bit more popular than transformer.huggingface.co. We know about 27 links to it since March 2021 and only 24 links to transformer.huggingface.co. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Right, but for a square, you have to add 8 samples, not 2, to handle the 4 starting points and 2 directions, but this does not account for the users who multi-stroke > Different strokes... I see what you did there :] I'm definitely in the reduce user burden camp. https://quickdraw.withgoogle.com/ is a good baseline to start from for a more resilient gesture recognizer. - Source: Hacker News / 6 months ago
Https://quickdraw.withgoogle.com/ Its like a drawing game, where it says soemthing like necklace and you have to draw what it says. Source: 9 months ago
At the suggestion of some of my pencil pals, I am trying DRAW IT (by Kwalee). It's a fast, party style game that seems to have a large (always on) user base. It's like Google Quick Draws ( https://quickdraw.withgoogle.com) with a learning AI judging you on your (very) quick sketches. I will miss the slower, patient, play-by-mail DS! brought... And also the massive potential to go wild the original DS! Had with... Source: 9 months ago
I love social experiments like that, makes you think about our own behavior. On a side note, I am always amazed to the kind of representation bias trap we all fall into: we always picture things the way we commonly know about it/remember it (see the NY museum pics in the video). One can experience the same creepy sense by playing QuickDraw[1] and watching sketches by others. For computer vision practitioners, no... - Source: Hacker News / 10 months ago
“Quick Draw with Google” is a go-to for middle school— I haven’t tried it with high school yet. That’s if there’s some sort of smart board available. Otherwise, I just let kids know that if they’ve completed what’s left by the teacher, they can work on other classes or have free time as long as they keep the noise level down so everyone else can finish. I personally don’t mind the kids chit-chatting, but I’ve had... Source: about 1 year ago
You can still play with GPT-2 here, which may give you a better idea of how alien a pattern detecting algorithm with zero ability to interact with an exterior reality that provides referents “thinks”: https://transformer.huggingface.co. Source: 11 months ago
Try signing up for https://beta.openai.com/playground, I got access to GPT-3 in a couple days. For GPT-2 you can try out https://transformer.huggingface.co/. - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
From GPT2: "Can AIs have conversations with multiple people at once? The answer is "yes" and "no". While it is possible to have a conversation with a single person (by communicating in text, email, etc .), it is not possible to have multiple conversations with one person at once." Https://transformer.huggingface.co/. Source: over 1 year ago
I would look into non-authoring approaches. Gamebooks and dungeon/hex crawls are one early example. Nowadays people are experimenting with analog techniques (like using cut-ups), or computer tech that takes advantage of machine learning like (Write With Transformer (AIDungeon is the more famous/infamous one, but more are emerging). Source: almost 2 years ago
If you want to play with Transformers you can go here https://transformer.huggingface.co/ They have a really easy to use library in Python called Transformers. - Source: Hacker News / about 2 years ago
Colornet - Neural Network to colorize grayscale images
GPT-J - Open-source cousin of GPT-3, everyone can use it
DALL-E - Creating images from text, from Open AI
Holo AI - Write & play AI stories
AETROS - Create, train and monitor deep neural networks
ShortlyAI - An AI creative writing assistant, on your browser.