Photography and AI 2 with Adobe

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • Join the Royal Photographic Society for a presentation looking at the how artificial intelligence (AI) will impact photography. Arranged by the RPS Thames Valley Region and hosted by RPS President Simon Hill HonFRPS this presentation is supported by Adobe.
    Our speaker is Rufus Deuchler, Adobe Worldwide Creative Cloud Evangelism Director. Join us to discover how Adobe has been introducing Artificial Intelligence into photographic workflows over the past decade, and how it is thinking about the future. Rufus will demonstrate examples of AI in Photoshop and Lightroom and how the emergence of generative AI can be managed to foster creativity.
    The RPS's AI hub is at www.rps.org/AI

Комментарии • 7

  • @SiddiqueHussain21
    @SiddiqueHussain21 Год назад

    A tool is a tool. How we use it and reate it to the work we create is all that matters. In time the world will accept any new tool, once the benefits and limitations are understood. That's what photographers faced in the 1840s, pxel editing software in the 90s, digital cameras in the 2000s...

  • @AustenGoldsmithPhotography
    @AustenGoldsmithPhotography Год назад +1

    In the future there will be people who get up before sunrise , carry a camera and tripod miles then wait patiently for a seagul or ship to pass and then capture that moment
    There will be other people quite happy to stay in bed , sit in front of a computer and let the computer do the heavy lifting
    I was sceptical prior to watching this presentation now I'm just sad

    • @RufusDeuchler
      @RufusDeuchler Год назад +2

      I agree, there is nothing quite like experiencing the real thing. Waking up in the middle of the night to be at the right location for a sunrise. That will make the image unique and full of wonders. However, I also strongly believe there are certain types of images and storytelling where this technology can come in quite handy. With content credentials and purpose, certain images will be magically be #madebyahuman. Don't be sad, there's room for everyone

    • @vsiglov
      @vsiglov Год назад +1

      In the same way that large format plate photographers were sad when compact film cameras meant that everyone could take photos easily and more cheaply. Let alone when Photoshop came out and things could be cloned out, skies replaced, composites constructed etc etc. AI further democratises image making. We are all still free to do it "properly" and the work that is being done with embedded credentials will mean that your truly photographic image will be labelled as authentic photography.

    • @AustenGoldsmithPhotography
      @AustenGoldsmithPhotography Год назад +1

      @@vsiglov I hope your right when it comes to Ai images being stamped . I think all Ai images should bear a watermark so that the viewer is aware that what they see is not real . Data tags etc will be lost in the soup
      IMO the photo taken with a compact camera or a large format are equally valid . They don't lie
      They have built a monster but listening to the replies to the questions suggests they are still trying to figure how to control the monster they have released onto the streets
      It all makes me more certain that my film camera and darkroom are the best place to be , artists , illustrators face a very uncertain future unless they just give up and say
      " if you can't beat them join them "

    • @vsiglov
      @vsiglov Год назад

      @@AustenGoldsmithPhotography Photos have always lied to some extent - the photographer makes all sorts of choices when taking the photo to show the "truth" they want to show. Once you get into the dark room even more creative choices are made... including compositing and removal etc (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_Gustave_Rejlander ) All that's happened is that it has gotten easier and cheaper to manipulate photos over the decades. We can't hold back process to some nostalgic golden age... but we can keep using the techniques and processes we love. Painters thought portrait painting was obsolete when photography was invented... it wasn't of course... and likewise AI will not kill photography

  • @paulburwood8231
    @paulburwood8231 Год назад

    Extremely interesting and looking forward to hearing how this will apply to distinctions in due course.