Thank you Charlotte! I am so glad. I have had no idea what I am even doing on Substack, but every time someone feels happiness in my general direction, I KNOW :)
I can relate lol, came here to learn, then one day I posted and the whole thing took off. It's a good feeling when you can connect with others. Learn from them, or just share a feeling and be validated. We are not in this alone, even tho, sometimes it can feel that way.
No one's sitting on AI tech for a decade privately without cashing in on it. You'll see much of it roll out before it's ready to be used, not the other way around.
Thank you, Geoff. I have never emailed you before, and you SHALL make it through the night. :) I believe in you. Good luck and I will see you around substakian town. I am off to do the things.
If other people can't curb their consumption habits, I don't think you should feel guilty about producing cream puffs. I'm saying this to myself too, as a producer of sometimes heavy meals that get lightened by your cream puffs. I'm doing that today with the last of your images I've been saving for this post.
AI images have made art free to share. There's a lot of bellyaching by people who see art as a commodity, one they sold for a living. Was that the best way to share that gift? 99 times out of 100, that art was used to sell something people didn't need. If they were lucky, they might have sold an image or two that spoke from their soul to a few drug dealers who can afford that kind of thing. If they were REALLY lucky they got chosen to have museum pieces that were used to smuggle offshore bank accounts through lucrative purchases with kickbacks to the art dealers.
None of our best gifts really come from us, only through us. They belong to everyone. And now you get to be the composer of whole orchestras of talented artists. Instead of fighting it, let's create agreeable ways for people to do ordinary things for their neighbors and have a decent life. They don't need to be the next Picasso. Please inundate my mailbox anytime, Amy!
And thank you for liking so I had a link back to this post. I've been wanting to check out Amy's new AI posts but hadn't yet fished for her homepage since she wasn't 'cluttering' our mailboxes with them. If only all my junk mail was so delicious!
Love your photos, the angles and the content. Great article, much of my inspiration for paintings comes from something I experienced or see out in the REALM we call World. Sometimes I have to ask WHY did it even catch my attention in the first place. Some thing the SIM through on to my path. I haven't used AI images. I may check out Bing, I think on the same lines as you do about using it. Do I want to engage or not. my whole question is, Have we always been engaging with the prompts of AI in the first place? I have this theory about CON sciousness. or the CON of kNOwinging. Good to be here, glad to have found your work Amy.
I can also relate to getting an idea and an image in my minds eye, and then drawing/sketching it, only to find that when the project is all done, it took on a life of it's own and I created something way beyond my original vision. I suppose this Bing AI does the same thing.
Beautiful photography! Thank you for introducing me to being a guy imaging! I am having a blast! Sending much Magic your way!💖✨💖
Thank you Charlotte! I am so glad. I have had no idea what I am even doing on Substack, but every time someone feels happiness in my general direction, I KNOW :)
I can relate lol, came here to learn, then one day I posted and the whole thing took off. It's a good feeling when you can connect with others. Learn from them, or just share a feeling and be validated. We are not in this alone, even tho, sometimes it can feel that way.
You are so talented, and have such a good eye for truth and beauty in this world.
No one's sitting on AI tech for a decade privately without cashing in on it. You'll see much of it roll out before it's ready to be used, not the other way around.
Toi toi you for Sunday. And thanks for making me start to think about AI inage creation in a different way!
Thank you, Katy :)
"Like" is not sufficient, not by a long, long shot! "Astonishment", in a pure and totally abundant sense,
is closer, but still lacking somewhat. Amy, please email me again (or I may not make it through the night. Geoff xxoo
Thank you, Geoff. I have never emailed you before, and you SHALL make it through the night. :) I believe in you. Good luck and I will see you around substakian town. I am off to do the things.
I made it! Here I am -- bright=eyed and bushy tailed. Let;s believe in each other, girl! Love (gulp!), Geoff xxoo
And bright eyed and bushy tailed to boot! :) Happy Sunday.
Haha. :)
If other people can't curb their consumption habits, I don't think you should feel guilty about producing cream puffs. I'm saying this to myself too, as a producer of sometimes heavy meals that get lightened by your cream puffs. I'm doing that today with the last of your images I've been saving for this post.
AI images have made art free to share. There's a lot of bellyaching by people who see art as a commodity, one they sold for a living. Was that the best way to share that gift? 99 times out of 100, that art was used to sell something people didn't need. If they were lucky, they might have sold an image or two that spoke from their soul to a few drug dealers who can afford that kind of thing. If they were REALLY lucky they got chosen to have museum pieces that were used to smuggle offshore bank accounts through lucrative purchases with kickbacks to the art dealers.
None of our best gifts really come from us, only through us. They belong to everyone. And now you get to be the composer of whole orchestras of talented artists. Instead of fighting it, let's create agreeable ways for people to do ordinary things for their neighbors and have a decent life. They don't need to be the next Picasso. Please inundate my mailbox anytime, Amy!
I like that, None of our Best gifts really come from us, only Through us! I have wondered this myself often.
And thank you for liking so I had a link back to this post. I've been wanting to check out Amy's new AI posts but hadn't yet fished for her homepage since she wasn't 'cluttering' our mailboxes with them. If only all my junk mail was so delicious!
Love your photos, the angles and the content. Great article, much of my inspiration for paintings comes from something I experienced or see out in the REALM we call World. Sometimes I have to ask WHY did it even catch my attention in the first place. Some thing the SIM through on to my path. I haven't used AI images. I may check out Bing, I think on the same lines as you do about using it. Do I want to engage or not. my whole question is, Have we always been engaging with the prompts of AI in the first place? I have this theory about CON sciousness. or the CON of kNOwinging. Good to be here, glad to have found your work Amy.
I can also relate to getting an idea and an image in my minds eye, and then drawing/sketching it, only to find that when the project is all done, it took on a life of it's own and I created something way beyond my original vision. I suppose this Bing AI does the same thing.
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