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AI Video is here to stay. And I think

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that we should really start to think

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about how we can use it

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to drive our business goals in a business setting,

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in our personal goals. If, you know, if you're, you want to,

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you know, get bigger on social media, how can you use AI to help

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you boost your social media presence,

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right? Or even in advertising your business, how can you use it to

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like, you know, you no longer need a big studio to hire

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talent. So how can you use AI to

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boost your company's social presence also?

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Good morning, good evening, good afternoon wherever you are and wherever you're watching from. My

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name is Matt Pearce, host of Visual Lounge and today we're going to be talking

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about the thing that is prevalent everywhere. Another day,

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another AI, Right? AI is taking over, but it is having a

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serious impact. It is having an impact on images and videos in particular, which

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at the Visual Lounge we are sincerely interested in.

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It is changing the way we start, are starting to see image creation,

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video creation and even the outputs from like tools that

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what can they do to help you get faster, get smarter? And now of course

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we've talked about our human framework and how we want to keep humans involved

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in that and have that kind of oversight. But we've got an

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expert today who is going to help us understand how

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this world is changing and maybe some of the things that we can do to

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maybe live better in it. So, so let's introduce our guest today,

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Myra Roldan. Myra is a digital transformation strategist

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with 20 plus years in technology and 12 years specializing in

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artificial intelligence. She has trained over 2,500

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professionals across AI, cloud and quantum technologies and

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led global initiatives at Amazon that reach more than 1,000

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employees. Her work spans Fortune 100 and 500 companies

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as well as US government entities including the army, Navy and

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state leadership. Myra's cross sector impact continues to shape

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how organizations build AI ready talent and

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drive enterprise wide change. And with that said, please help me welcome Myra

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to the Visual Lounge. Hey Mayra. Hey. Good day,

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Matt. Good day. It's good, good to have you here.

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I, I'm such a fan of, of you and your work and it's about

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time that we had you on the show to talk about this really pressing topic.

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AI is kind of everywhere, isn't it? Yeah,

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it's everything and anything people can talk about these days.

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So. Okay, so I set us up here a little bit at the beginning that

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obviously AI is changing a lot of things across a lot of

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industries, a lot of kind of workflows,

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particularly I'm curious, you know, you've been doing AI for a long time, which is.

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I was going to ask you about 12 years. That's a long time for AI,

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considering I think most of us have been doing it for like a year or

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two. Yep. Yeah. Actually,

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I've been in the AI space for 12 and so I've been

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really playing around with video and just media in general

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putting out, you know, trying to push the limits to see, you know,

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what we can create and what are the considerations that we need to have

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in place right now and the things that we should be watching

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for. So. Yeah, so,

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so foundationally then, you know, we've had

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like someone come on and they talked a little bit about their experience with VO3,

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you know, and obviously it creates, it takes a lot of churn

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to create something that works well. And you can edit, but you can edit it

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together. So what's the current kind of current landscape then of

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AI video that we should be aware of? What's, what's maybe

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front of mind, what's kind of now old passe stuff.

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Yeah. So I would say that right now it's getting better. Right? Like

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slowly but surely you're starting to get

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at least AR AI

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avatars or people in, in the videos that look like real

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people. Right. Where the lip sync motion is getting better.

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But there's still limitations, right, because you're still limited to 8 minutes

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of video at the most with. With

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Gemini. Right. If you create it using

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their tool. And then there's Sora. Right. Which

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also has the ability to create these

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videos. However, I think that there's still a

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component in here where we still need to get the prompts right,

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to be able to get like the output that we're looking for.

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And the videos aren't going to always be consistent when you have

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to like piece together these little, you know, eight

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seconds. It's not eight minutes. I said eight minutes. That was wrong. It's eight

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seconds, eight second videos and you have a. Your character

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changes. You know, either they, they lost their glasses or.

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And so you have to really still have a strategy. You have to

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have like, what's your design

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element going to be like, how are you storyboarding this? Right. Storyboarding is

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still a step you should not skip.

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I, I truly believe in that. And I think that

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until these tools get better, we really need to be

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careful because we're entering what's called the Watch

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Bait era. So have you heard of that? The

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Watch Bait? No. In fact, I was just gonna ask you what is Watch Bait

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era. Yeah. So Watch Bait is

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where AI created short clips are going to start

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dominating social media feeds. And so we're going to start

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seeing, and you might already see it OpenAI sora to being

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integrated into like social media platforms and into platforms like

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Synthesia and other

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video generation platforms. And it's really going to

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signal a shift towards rapid automation of content.

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So people are going to start producing this AI content at scale

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and, and sharing it on, on social media. And so

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now us as viewers, we as viewers have to like be able

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to disseminate. Is it AI or is it not AI? Right. Is it

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misinformation? Is it not misinform information?

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What's, what's reality? Right. I think that's,

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that's what we're entering. So clickbait. We

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all know about clickbait. Now we have to enter Watch Bait.

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I. Now that's the connection right there. Yeah.

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Okay. So obviously it sounds like, it feels like. And I,

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and I'm, I'm out there trying to generate stuff and do stuff and play with

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it as well, but it feels like we're, we're, we're not there yet. We're

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on the cusp of. There are good things. I think there are, as you mentioned,

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I think avatars have come a long way even in the last year. I mean,

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voice generation, which obviously is part of the video, has come.

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Listen to like 11 labs. Holy cow. Amazing. Kind of just quality

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and sounding. So from a practical

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standpoint, then if, if I'm, you know, in a department

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L&D or something else at, at an organization and I'm

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hearing, hey, you should be using AI, right.

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What's the reality here? Like what I can really get done

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is it, are we functionally at a point where we can do stuff or is

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it really, gosh, we, if we could wait a little bit longer, we might be.

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Feel a little bit better about it. Yeah. So I would say first

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of all, you know, if you're, if you're an L and D and a

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corporation in a corporate setting or in a business setting and you're being told

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to use AI for like this video generation, you need to make

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sure that whatever tools you're using are like

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authorized to be used within your organization.

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Because I have seen some incidences where people are

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using tools that are not authorized and they're putting

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company data into these video platforms and there's

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no delete button. Once you put that information in there, it's like there.

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Right. And so I think that the first

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thing would Be like, what's the goal? Like, why are we using

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AI? Why do we want to use AI? Is it a. Is it a

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budget thing? Is it a speed thing? Do they think

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it's going to be better quality. Quality than a person?

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Like, why are we using it? Right. And then if you do have an approved

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platform, what's your strategy for using it? Right.

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And how are you going to track the ROI on it

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to be able to say, oh, this was better and faster,

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or maybe it wasn't better, but it was

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faster. You know, it's that. It's that cheap, fast,

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good paradigm, you know, where you can only have it if it's.

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If it's cheap, it won't be fast, right? Yep. And

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it won't be like, you can't have cheap and fast and have it be good.

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If it's cheap and good, it won't be fast kind of deal.

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So you need to be able to weigh that out. And then there's the ethical

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part of it too. Right. Like with these

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platforms, like I said, there's no delete button, so are

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you infringing on someone's likeness?

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Mm. Right.

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And you just have to watch out for that. Yeah. So it does sound

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like. And, you know, actually I just went through our AI. We had an AI

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training that we had to go through, and I thought about you the whole, the

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whole time, because we've had. You and I, I know, have had conversations about these

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things. Right. About that. We. We have to have those things in place before

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we're doing it. So let's say, let's say we're in our organization, we

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do have those in place. We've got our safeguards. We're not, we know not to

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put our personal identifying information of our customers or anything else in.

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Into the platform. Um.

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It. It is kind of that practical thing. I, I love your. The. The triangle's

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perfect for this because I do think I can get fast, but

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it's maybe not good. And I can get. Or I can get good,

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but I've spent a long time on it, but it wasn't cheap to maybe pay

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for the models or whatever. Um,

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so is there, are there other things like, like, are there practical things we

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could be doing that allows us to get better outcome? It's not. I know you're

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playing with a lot of different tools and are there things that you're seeing that,

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like, have changed? Whether it's that maybe thinking about prompts or is

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it. Is there structurally things? Are, are you feeding it models of,

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like, I Say models like imagery, which again, ethically,

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you gotta get on that, make sure it's not some model that didn't agree to

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it. Yeah, yeah. So you know, when it comes to like,

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image creation. So like, I've authored some

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books and I've created images

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using AI, and one of the things that it

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struggles with is this idea of consistency, right? Like image

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consistency, whether it's video or images.

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And so I've had some luck with

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ChatGPT on image consistency, where I

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have fed it and you created an image and then fed it

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that same image instead. Just put this image in different poses, right.

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So that I can do with using ChatGPT. I

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always use illustrations. I never use like real people.

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And then for video, that's been a, a little

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bit more of a struggle, you know, because

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I, I've put. Been putting out this series of Abuela and

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tech and AI where she explains different

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AI concepts in like eight seconds, which is a feat. Right?

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That's awesome. And. But I haven't been able to get a consistent

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character. She's close, right? With every video,

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but she's not consistent. And so I would say you need to be

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okay with that. So you need to, when you're developing like your content

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strategy, your video strategy, your image strategy, you need to put

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a threshold for like, how much of a difference is okay,

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most people don't notice. They'll. They'll let it fly, right?

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But also like being careful about using

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these avatars to represent like an entire community that you're

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presenting to. Right? That's, that can be

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tricky. And avoiding, like

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trying to avoid stereotypes, trying to avoid,

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you know, misrepresentation of groups, we run into some, like,

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tricky areas where we have to be careful. And so I would

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say when you are

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planning to use these AI platforms for either image or video

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creation, make sure that one, your

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prompts are strong. So that's going to be the first thing

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you want your prompts to have

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a good foundation of what you

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are trying to do.

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You know, when you're using these tools, your prompts,

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you might notice that if you try to put in a

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prompt that's too long, you're not going to get the best

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output because it's not going to know how

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to process your prompt

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correctly and you might end up with garbage.

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And if you use Tool, for example, and just give you like Google Flow,

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where you can then go in and create videos, right,

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Using the Google tool,

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what you'll find is that it will

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only take a certain amount of characters

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for you to be able to effectively generate a video.

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And so like, if you want it to have a script, that

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script has to be super short. And if you, you know, you

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can and you should define your character

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down to like the T, like if you were to describe a person

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as far as look, what they're wearing, what their hair looks like, what their eyes

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look like, what are they doing, what setting are they in. Right. That's the

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most important part. Important part. But that script has to be like

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super tight. And so that's a consideration that you have to have

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when you're designing. Because eight seconds is

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not a long time. No, it is not a long time.

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And it's. It's interesting just because, you know, I'm. I'm

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hearing what you're saying. Obviously there's a lot of con consideration to put into this.

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Right. Because it's gotta be thoughtful about. Not only was what that

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person looks like, which it is. It is a challenge to describe a person. I

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find. Right. To get the kind of details because you inadvertently could say,

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describe it one way and you end up with something that you didn't want. And.

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But that also goes to like, if you're trying to represent someone in a particular

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community, are you giving that a proper kind of

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description and not making sure it's stereotypical and all those things.

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So I love the considerations though, because I do think this is a

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challenge. We're in this phase where I hope it all gets easier,

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but it's not right now. Right. Like it is. I'm

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finding that AI is a good partner for a lot of

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things, particularly text. I find it's a good thought

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partner. Ask. Help me think about questions. Maybe I'm not

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wouldn't have thought about from a media creation. There are things

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I know feel I feel pretty consistent about again, voices, avatars, pretty

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consistent. I can get some pretty good images depending on

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what kind of information I provide. But there's

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a lot of stuff I'm also like, I'm throwing out a lot. I feel like

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I'm doing stuff throwing out. It's a lot of still iterative testing

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versus like I get one prompt and I. I've

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nailed it. Yeah. And I think that's something that

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people have to be okay with right now, is that you're going to generate a

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lot of things that you won't be able to use. Right. And it

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does. There's a cost to generating video and

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images right. When you use any of these platforms.

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So one of my favorite platforms to generate images is Ideogram

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and So with ideogram, though, you get capped. Even

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when you pay, you know, there's a cap. So, like, if you don't get it

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right, like the first few times, it'll say, like, you're

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done. Right. Come back.

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And so that can be frustrating. Right. Because it's, it's.

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We have to hone in our ability to take what's in our head because we

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always can picture, like, this is the specific thing I want.

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Right. This is what I want. But then we go to write a prompt on

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it and it's garbage. Yep. Right. Or

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it gets misinterpreted by the AI. Yeah, I've

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heard a couple times the, the analogy one is

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more funny. Mike Parkinson, I don't know if you know Mike, he's. He calls it

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the drunk intern. But I've heard the intern analogy. Right. Like I, and

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I work with actual human interns and, and they're brilliant and they

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have their own skills, but it is often without. They are without

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context of a career at an organization

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that has. Of someone who's been there a long time. And so I often find

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I have to be much more descriptive to an intern because they

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just, you know, they might not know what outlook is. Right. And, and that's not.

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Because they're not capable of knowing what outlook is. They just haven't experienced

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outlook. And so I do, I do appreciate that, that sentiment. Right.

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Like, you gotta. Yeah. Be willing to express more.

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Yeah. And it's just, it's hard. Right? Yeah. Without

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expressing too much is what I wanted to say. Like, because too much and then

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it gets confused because you've added too many details and now it's like I'm overwhelmed,

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just like an intern. I've said too much. Yeah. Yeah. Like

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you gave me way too much information. Now I don't know what to do with

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it. Yes. So,

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Maya, as you are often on like, the cutting edge,

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you are always looking at, I know from knowing you

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for a while now that you're always looking ahead at kind of what's next.

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And I'm guessing that gives you some pretty good vision to

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look ahead here. Short term, where do you think

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we're going in terms of AI images and

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videos in the next. Let's say. I know it's hard to predict. I'm not asking

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to necessarily put a flag in the sand, but like six

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months, a year, what do we think will be true? That's not true today.

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I think that we're going to move from like this

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experimentation phase and to everyday use.

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Right. So more People are going to start to use it for different purposes. We'll

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see an increase of use for social media. I don't know if we're going to

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see an increased use of AI in corporate just

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yet because I think we're still feeling it out, right. So corporate

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usually lags behind a little bit,

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but we will start to see

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consumer apps start to make its way

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into the business setting. And

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I think what we need to

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really watch out for is whether it's in the corporate setting

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or not, is the, we're going to see an increase in synthetic media

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that's amplifying misinformation, wrong

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information, or emphasizing, you know, the, the need for stronger

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providence provenance and like digital liter

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literacy standards across the board.

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Because anyone can create a video, an AI video right now.

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Right. And you have,

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I think it's having guardrails around how

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we create and what those tools look

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like and how they evolve into like the tools that we use every day. So

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I think we'll see some video generation and copilot we might see

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some video generation integrated into

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other platforms that we use in business, you know, and we may

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start seeing the ability. Through.

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Middlemen like a Zapier or through

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APIs application interfaces

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to these, like commercial consumer products to

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generate video. And you know, there's still going to

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be a need to be able to edit those videos

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to make them make sense. And so I think we need to get good at

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our video editing skills so we can start

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cutting out like the bad stuff. So instead of throwing the clips away,

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right. Keeping what we can use and figuring out like, how do we splice

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this together so it doesn't, so it doesn't look bad.

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Yeah, well, if you need a tool, I've got one.

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Oh, I, I now I use it every day. Well, thank you.

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Well, I, you know, I think I, I, I see what you're saying too, right.

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That social media, obviously there's lots of, of things that are

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happening and it's happening fast and it usually is a precursor to coming

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into the workplace. Right. We saw this with,

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gosh, I'm gonna date myself. But social media, Twitter became like yammer, right?

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Twitter was happening and people mic y and then Microsoft

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bought yammer and brought it in. Now I think yammer might be dead at this

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point, but it's a thing. And so I

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definitely see that. You know, I have a

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prediction that, and this is what I hope to

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be true. Whether it is true or not, I don't know because I'm not very

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good at predicting Things. But the ability to have more and

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more control in what the AI generates, I think is going to be really important

Speaker:

to, to people. And so, you know, giving,

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giving, maybe more finite control over, you know, backgrounds,

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characters, like letting it layer things rather than just kind of whole. Right

Speaker:

now, it's just a wholesale. I prompt it. If I'm good at describing things,

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I might get what I want. If not, you know, it puts

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in a different scene or whatever. I think that's going to be

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tricky because we're working with generative AI, and the whole point of

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generative AI is that it generates new content based

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on historical data. So it's making new content every

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single time. And so it's not persistent, meaning it

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doesn't. I think what we need is more persistence and

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character consistency. So, like, if I create a character, I want to. I want it

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to be persistent. I want it to. To look and feel the same, no matter.

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No matter where I put it. I would love to have the ability to

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have character consistence where the background is

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transparent and I can dump that character anywhere. Right. That would be.

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That'd be a beauty. Right? To be able to do that.

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Yes. Yeah. And I mean, I think the reality

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is images have gotten not perfect, but it's better.

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And so I imagine video is. It's just. It seems video is lagging

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about a year to year and a half, kind of where images were.

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I mean, we're getting to the point where our images now no

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longer have six fingers or 20 fingers. Right. So, like,

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that's a good thing.

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Yep. But there's. It still generates some weird images occasionally, depending on what you prompt.

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It's. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But it's

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getting better, right? And it's going to get better over time. Yeah.

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It's the worst it will ever be. So. Well, Meyer, this has been. I love

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the take on it. I love the thoughts about ethics. I love the thinking about,

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like, you know, how to. How we can apply video. Video today, obviously, it's not

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a. It's not a one and done. There's work that needs to be done. And

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that's a good news for us as humans who still want to do jobs and

Speaker:

still want to work. Right. There's lots of room for us to be involved. But

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I do want to move us along here into our speed round, which are quick,

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fast questions with quick, hopefully quick, fast answers

Speaker:

determined by the role of an eye. So here we go.

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Okay, so here is our dice tower. We have a die to tell us which

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questions to ask. Myra. Here we Go. First roll is number

Speaker:

12. So question number 12. Oh, what's your

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one? Go to tool that helps you get your job done on a

Speaker:

regular basis. And when I say tool, it could be software, physical

Speaker:

gear, whatever, something that you use often to

Speaker:

help you get your job done. Yeah, I would say my phone.

Speaker:

I love it. Yeah. My smartphone, because,

Speaker:

you know, sometimes I'm not near my laptop and I need to pull information

Speaker:

up or I need to get to my files, and my smartphone is connected

Speaker:

to, like, all my external drives, so I can just pull a file up and

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send it. Like, I can. I can run my business

Speaker:

off of my smartphone.

Speaker:

Yes, well, and we know how people feel when they get detached from their

Speaker:

smartphone, and, yeah, you know, it feels a little bit. Whoa, what's going

Speaker:

on? So. Love it. Well, are you ready for your next question?

Speaker:

Yeah, let's do it. Here we go. Question number two. Oh, we can't

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have two 12s. I'm rolling really consistently. All right, the dot

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is at the bottom. So that is a. That is a. Actually

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going to be a nine. So question number nine here. What's the

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one thing that you're most proud of in your career?

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I would say the thing that I'm most proud of has to be

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the people that I have been able to interact with and who I've had

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an impact on and who come back and share

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their, like, the things they've done with, you

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know, either the con. The consultation or mentorship that I gave them.

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I have so many people that I engage with and meet

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on a regular basis, and that it just. It

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makes me feel good that I'm able to, you know, share the knowledge,

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help others grow. And I. And I love cheering

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on for everyone. Like, you know, if you're going after a goal and I.

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And I've helped you in some way, or I gave you an introduction or I

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gave you some information or you went through training or whatever it is, right. You

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come back and you tell me, like, hey, like, this went great or this. You

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know, I love that. I also love when they come back to me and they're

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struggling. Right. And they're like, I still need help getting there. So I'm

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always. I'm happy that I can help.

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Well, I know when I want someone in my corner, you're one of the people

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I want there. Cheering for sure. Thanks, Matt. You

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bet. Okay. Cheering you on for a long time. I know, and I appreciate it.

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So we got one more question here. Here we go. Okay,

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question number 10. Ooh. Okay, this one's

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interesting. If you had to shift careers, they said, no more

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of what you're doing today. No more, no more AI business. No more of what

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you're doing. And you could do anything that you wanted,

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you know, out of the world. AI, what would you do? What was the thing

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that you would move to? I would be a,

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a travel advisor. Like, I

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love traveling, so I would want to like, like a travel

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influencer almost, but not an influencer, but like helping people, like figure out their

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travel. I want to go to the hotels and see which hotels are good.

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I want to go to different countries and, and then be able to buy. Create

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like travel experiences for people that I think that would be

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fun. I get to travel and I get to help people like, you know,

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have a good trip. Yeah. Well, I'll have to ask you next time. Hey,

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Myra, what should I do on my next. Actually, you know what, you can help

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me out when we're at Dev Learn. I'll be Myra, what should I go do?

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DevLearn. That's what I'll do. That's all I have time for. It's the conference.

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Yep. I'll tell you. You should go do your session. That's right.

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That's right. Do go do your session. I love it. Well, Myra,

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I always enjoy talking to you. It's always so much fun and always so

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insightful. I feel like I just, I learned so much from you. If

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people want to connect with you, they want to learn more from you. Where should

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they go? Where should they turn? Yeah, so

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connect with me on LinkedIn. I'm under Myra Worldan. I'm pretty easy to

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find. If you look for Matt, you can find me also under

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Matt's profile, my website. So I

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ondesto AI, but we have an intelligence suite which I

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think is a better. Is more useful than my website.

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So it's Intelligence ondesto AI. We have resources

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in our intelligence suite to help, whether it's

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regular users or businesses, figure out how to get started

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with AI and integrating it. Because personal and business use

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of AI are two different things. And so,

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yes, that's where the two places I would say intelligence suite

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and LinkedIn. Feel free to connect with

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me on LinkedIn. I love connecting with people. I love. I like. I look at

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my feed every morning to see what everyone's up to. So I

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like to doom scroll on LinkedIn and see what everyone's doing before

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I start doom scrolling on TikTok,

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which. You can also find you over there, I'm sure as well. Yeah, you can

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Find me on Talk under Learn with Myra. Yeah, and I'm on

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Instagram under Learn with Myra also, and I post,

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you know, educational content. That's.

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Hey, good, good stuff. So, well, Myra, as we wrap up the show,

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we always like to ask our guest, what is your final

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take? Yeah, my final take is

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AI Video is here to stay. And I

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think that we should really start to think

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about how we can use it

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to drive our business goals in a business setting,

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in our personal goals. If, you know, if you're. You want to,

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you know, get bigger on social media, how can you use AI to help

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you boost your social media presence?

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Right. Or even in advertising your business, how can you use it to,

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like, you know, you no longer need a big studio to hire

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talent, so how can you use AI to

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boost your company's social presence also?

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All right, well, Myra, thank you so much for joining me here in the Visual

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Lounge. Yeah, thanks for the invite, Matt. This was

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fun. You bet. So, all right, everybody, real quick as we wrap

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things up. Uh, look, AI, we know it's here. We keep talking about it. We're

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going to keep talking about it because it is so prevalent in the things that

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we're doing with images and video. If you're looking for some AI, you want to

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dive in a little bit, you want to try something, I go recommend, you know,

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lots of tools out there. Go give Camtasia AI a try.

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It's. It's free, it's a labs, so it's beta, but it's got

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some really cool stuff. You upload some images and watch it, create a video from

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images. And the cool thing is you can take it into Camtasia and you can

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manipulate and change and move things around. So give it a chance. Go

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try it out. We got some other great things that we've been working on that

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we announced at our October event. If you didn't get to see that, but with

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that said, you know, there's so much going on, so much change. You got to

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make sure that you're staying up on top of these things and all the things

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that will help you feel like, able to do the job that you need to

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do. So I encourage you, take a little time and to

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spend and level up for yourself. We'll see you next time, everybody.