That's awesome how you created your own node. Could you maybe do another tutorial where you go step by step through the whole process, especially also how to "package" everything and set it up for use in comfyui? Thank you!
thank you for the heads up - I keep receiving feedbacks on how low (or high) the volume sounds, and I never found a dB I should shoot for. last I read was -5/-10 dB, might be too high then.
With a three and a half years head start :) on a more serious note though, I’ve been working with AI since before Dall-E was in closed beta, around the time GauGAN was announced. The thing that helps me the most, apart from actually working in the field and meeting every day for works with some very talented engineers and creatives, is reading up on published papers, RUclips videos, Reddit, random stuff on GitHub, and most of all thinking about how I can solve problems I have had as a creative / photographer before starting this job.
@@risunobushi_ai Thanks for sharing this. I’m also on a similar path in my company, leading the creative team for photoshoots. The business wants to focus more on AI, and I’m overwhelmed with the software I need to run locally. I have a Mac, which I’ve used as an excuse not to learn new things. The confy UI relies more on CUDA and not MPS (unless you have a suggestion on how to run stuff like CatVTON on MPS or Mac). Seeing you, an artsy person who’s turned technical, motivates me. Until now, it’s either engineers explaining it or artists using paid software. You’re one of the few who’ve successfully bridged the creative and technical gap. I’m truly inspired by your videos.
not only amazing works but also increase my curiosity by showing how you create your work flow. these are so valuable. Thank you
That's awesome how you created your own node. Could you maybe do another tutorial where you go step by step through the whole process, especially also how to "package" everything and set it up for use in comfyui? Thank you!
Sure, I'll add it to the list, although I'm sure it's going to be an engineer's nightmare!
Like Impact Frames, it is rare to see someone creates nodes and makes a tutorial about it. Thanks.
As always, nicely done and well explained, Andrea! It seems that Claude is the best LLM to get proper results at the end.
yeah, Claude has been a huge help to solve complex math and custom node requests!
Great stuff as always. Thanks Andrea.
Thank you as always.
great work like always
Thx for the tutorial, just a heads up ur content loudness is -13db normalizing would be sweet for the future.
thank you for the heads up - I keep receiving feedbacks on how low (or high) the volume sounds, and I never found a dB I should shoot for. last I read was -5/-10 dB, might be too high then.
@@risunobushi_ai yea its tricky, I think YT compresses to -12 so normalizing to that should give a cocntet loudness of 0
Thanks brother
당신은 천재인가요? 아무래도 천재가 맞아보입니다
from a photographer how do you learn all this?
With a three and a half years head start :) on a more serious note though, I’ve been working with AI since before Dall-E was in closed beta, around the time GauGAN was announced.
The thing that helps me the most, apart from actually working in the field and meeting every day for works with some very talented engineers and creatives, is reading up on published papers, RUclips videos, Reddit, random stuff on GitHub, and most of all thinking about how I can solve problems I have had as a creative / photographer before starting this job.
@@risunobushi_ai Thanks for sharing this. I’m also on a similar path in my company, leading the creative team for photoshoots. The business wants to focus more on AI, and I’m overwhelmed with the software I need to run locally. I have a Mac, which I’ve used as an excuse not to learn new things. The confy UI relies more on CUDA and not MPS (unless you have a suggestion on how to run stuff like CatVTON on MPS or Mac). Seeing you, an artsy person who’s turned technical, motivates me. Until now, it’s either engineers explaining it or artists using paid software. You’re one of the few who’ve successfully bridged the creative and technical gap. I’m truly inspired by your videos.