Fun with A.I. : 3
Here are some more examples of the successes (but mostly failures) I’ve had working with the artificial intelligence (A.I.) platform Grok to create images and videos to illustrate my blogposts. You can see previous efforts here
In private correspondence readers have
asked what instructions I give Grok. Here’s an example
Create Images for a fictional story
set in England in the 1960s. It is an elite ‘public’ school and in the
headmaster’s study a senior male pupil aged 18 wearing grey trousers, a white
shirt and blue tie is stretched over a desk waiting to be caned. The headmaster
is also in the picture
It is worth mentioning here that Grok is
very American and doesn’t understand what a school cane is. If you ask for one,
it will inevitably give you what we English call a walking stick. It is much
better at producing school paddles (the United States weapon of choice in
schools).
I’ve also noticed it prefers to make
drawings rather than photographs.
Grok is inconsistent and sometimes it will
give you an image and other times, not. If you keep trying (maybe by changing a
word or two in the instruction) it might come up with something. Sometimes it
will go much further than you asked. Once I have an image, only then do I ask
Grok to turn it into a video. I don’t offer further instructions, and I just let
Grok have its head.
Here’s an example of an illustration I
asked Grok to make. It is a straightforward headmaster facing a senior pupil in
his study.
I then asked it to make a video and it came up with this. I did not prompt it on the dialogue.
I asked for an image of a schoolmaster
caning a senior pupil in front of the class and Grok gave me this.
The video it then produced was a bit off
target, but it did create the basics for an interesting story.
Here’s another take on the caning in the classroom theme.
In the video, the cane is at least a bit
on target …
Now we move the action back into the
headmaster’s study
And this time the video is bang on target.
One of the frustrations with Grok is that
it is inconsistent. It has ‘safeguards’ that it will not breach. Until, that
is, it does so... and often of its own accord.
Then, without further prompting, Grok turned
this photo into a quite disturbing video.
And to finish, something that I think is
hilarious (I hope you find it fun too…)
I started with a cartoon that I’ve had in my collection for years. I don’t know who drew it or where it’s from (if you know, please tell).
Traditional
School Discipline
Traditionalschooldiscipline@gmail.com







Excellent stuff
ReplyDeleteVery cool stuff - thank you for posting.
ReplyDeleteGreat Fun. Just a thought. If Grok prefers American terms, have you tried 'switch' instead of cane? If the result looks too much like a thin branch, then maybe 'a smooth and straight willow switch' might produce something closer to our preffered school cane? Accepting that it will normally reject bare buttocks, I wonder if 'wearing thin, flesh coloured, swimming trunks', or even trying 'wearing thin, transparent swimming trunks' would be accepted. Doubtful the second version, though! Apparently Americans refer to 'swimming trunks' or 'swim trunks'. Surprisingly 'speedos' seems to be a modern English term. Please do show more of the results of your experiments - and the best of luck with them.
ReplyDeleteIt seems like a terribly frustrating process and somewhat random too so your persistence at generating worthwhile images or videos is appreciated. TR
ReplyDeleteThese are very good. Much improved. I know how much effort went into getting these. FB
ReplyDeleteThe teacher's accent in the second video ("all right, that's enough slacking") make me think Grok has been watching "Educating Yorkshire". Nice.
ReplyDelete"Educating Yorkshire" doesn't of course include any canings, but it does include a variety of students that seem like they maybe deserve one. And they do mostly have proper school uniforms of course.