detailed and realistic (upper body portrait:1. 2) of a woman with a few (freckles:0. 8) BREAK round eyes and short messy hair BREAK shot outside
This is the promt for Stable Diffusion, an AI in the image generator category
detailed and realistic (upper body portrait:1. 2) of a woman with a few (freckles:0. 8) BREAK round eyes and short messy hair BREAK shot outside, wearing a white t shirt, staring at camera, chapped lips BREAK soft natural lighting, portrait photography, magical photography, dramatic lighting, photo realism, ultra-detailed, intimate portrait composition, Leica 50mm, f1. 4 asian, chinese, busty, (epicnegative:0.9) easynegative
Query result:
Isabella Chen
AI and Creative Industries
Share on social networks:
Your text prompt
Early testers of Microsoft’s new AI chatbot have complained of receiving numerous “unhinged” messages. Most of the attention has been around Google’s rival, Bard, embarrassingly giving false information in promo material. That error, and Bard’s shambolic announcement, caused investors to panic and wiped $120 billion from the company’s value. However, unlike Microsoft, Google is yet to release its chatbot for public testing. Many have complained that it suggests Google is behind Microsoft in the chatbot race. The issues now cropping up with Microsoft’s chatbot are justifying Google’s decision not to rush its rival to market. In fact, Google AI Chief Jeff Dean reportedly even told fellow employees that the company has more “reputational risk” in providing wrong information.
Early testers of Microsoft’s new AI chatbot have complained of receiving numerous “unhinged” messages. Most of the attention has been around Google’s rival, Bard, embarrassingly giving false information in promo material. That error, and Bard’s shambolic announcement, caused investors to panic and wiped $120 billion from the company’s value. However, unlike Microsoft, Google is yet to release its chatbot for public testing. Many have complained that it suggests Google is behind Microsoft in the chatbot race. The issues now cropping up with Microsoft’s chatbot are justifying Google’s decision not to rush its rival to market. In fact, Google AI Chief Jeff Dean reportedly even told fellow employees that the company has more “reputational risk” in providing wrong information.
Read more