of Frank McPherson
Gemini Advanced costs $20 per month, the same cost per month as the chatGPT subscription. The $20 price tag feels to me to be a barrier to entry of this level of AI for most people, who already may a monthly price for their mobile carrier.#
I wonder whether Google Gemini is now able to work with Google Home routines. The fact that I cannot tell Gemini to trigger a routine is why I have not installed Gemini on my Pixel 7a. Update: Tom's Guide says it can, so I am going to try installing it. Despite what Tom's Guide says, I cannot ask Gemini to trigger a home routine. I am going to keep it on for now to see if an update is pushed.#
9to5Google speculates that the new Pixel Weather app will come to "old" Pixel phones, like my Pixel 7a, in the December Pixel feature drop.#
I wonder when Google will release a new Pixel Tablet with the processor and specs to handle their AI? #
  • Thinking about the debate between AI and photography. I've heard the question, "what is a photo?" being raised, implying a definition of a photo as a graphical capture of a real moment. The introduction of AI tools that allow one to alter photos from something that really "happened" to something that didn't is what is being considered a problem. Except, what about how Photoshop has been used all these years? Presumably, people see editing a photo to improve it is different, but that editing can turn into a photo of something that did not happen. What about Google's Magic Eraser? #
  • Perhaps there ought to be a definition of what is produced when one uses AI to alter a photo. I would suggest calling them composed pictures. In my mind a photo that is "re-imagined" into something else is more like a painting than a photo and I think I would refer to them as something other than a photo. I think we are seeing the development of a new art form, the ability to craft the right words to generate a picture.#
  • While I personally would never present a "re-imagined" picture as a photo, I think there needs to be at least a best practice where these AI tools include some type of watermark indicating they were produced by AI. The whole idea of discerning that which is real (news, photos, videos) and that which is fake is a problem because humans are lazy. I personally want to trust people and think living in a world in which everything has to be verified is exhausting.#

© 2024 Frank McPherson

Last update: Thursday August 15, 2024; 2:13 PM EDT.