If you've ever pondered what your dog might look like as a cat,Canada or another dog, your time is now. And even if you haven't, the tech company NVIDIA wants to show you.
NVIDIA has leveraged big gains in AI technology to develop a fun tool called the GANimal App, which allows users to upload a photo of their pet and generate pictures of what it would look like as either different breeds of the same animal — or a different animal altogether.
After watching the demo, I decided to give the tool a whirl with a photo of my dog, Charlie.
Here's the original.
The results were, well, varied.
Some of these, like the flat-coated retriever (No. 3) and the Irish wolfhound (No. 8), actually resemble Charlie. Even the meerkat (No. 13) bears a strong resemblance.
But for the most part, the dogs just look like dogs, and some of the other animals look pretty much like themselves, with Charlie's tongue added. The tiger cat (No. 16) looks like any old cat, look of contempt and all.
You can keep hitting the translate button to generate more results, but the resemblances remain about the same.
Some of those, especially the corgi (No. 16) and the Leonberger (No. 12), look like Charlie. The Persian cat (No. 11) looks like a cat.
Still, it's a fun exercise — and an interesting way for NVIDIA to flex its AI developments. Thanks to developments in the Generative Adversarial Network, which NVIDIA describes as "an emerging AI technique that pits one neural network against another," we have "new AI techniques that give computers enough smarts to see a picture of one animal and recreate its expression and pose on the face of any other creature."
SEE ALSO: Here's why you shouldn't download that viral celebrity lookalike appThe research team that developed this algorithm explains in a paper how they were able to create a system that generates a new animal image using a single photo of the original animal:
“In this case, we train a network to jointly solve many translation tasks where each task is about translating a random source animal to a random target animal by leveraging a few example images of the target animal,” Liu explained. “Through practicing solving different translation tasks, eventually the network learns to generalize to translate known animals to previously unseen animals.”
It's only a matter of time, then, until we're faced with a burgeoning crisis of animal deep fakes. But, for now, enjoy the fun.
[Via Gizmodo]
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best keyboard deals: Save on Asus gaming keyboards at Amazon
Best TV deal: Save $20 on Amazon Fire TV 2
Best Dyson deal: Save $120 on the Dyson V8 Plus
People are asking ChatGPT if they're hot enough
Best robot vacuum deal: Save $200 on Eufy X10 Pro Omni robot vacuum
Wordle today: The answer and hints for May 29, 2025
Watch the moment SpaceX Starship crushed a major milestone in latest test
Hurricane Laura's impact lingered with nightmarish mosquito swarms
Bluetti Solar Generator Elite 200 V2 deal: Get $800 off
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。