- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
… How is this better than Animatediff?
At the moment, it doesn’t really seem to be that much better. Maybe the frames generated are a little more coherent, but you have less control over it. And from what I have seen so far, it just does very simple motions, like billowing smoke, a turning head, or clouds moving through the sky.
This is the first I’ve heard of Animatediff. Where do you hear about stuff like that? Lemmy? Reddit? I try to stay up to date on AI stuff, but it feels like I have to do so much digging to get new info.
I just keep an eye on the extensions list for Automatic1111: https://github.com/AUTOMATIC1111/stable-diffusion-webui/wiki/Extensions
This is the best summary I could come up with:
It’s an open-weights preview of two AI models that use a technique called image-to-video, and it can run locally on a machine with an Nvidia GPU.
Last year, Stability AI made waves with the release of Stable Diffusion, an “open weights” image synthesis model that kick started a wave of open image synthesis and inspired a large community of hobbyists that have built off the technology with their own custom fine-tunings.
They can operate at varying speeds from 3 to 30 frames per second, and they output short (typically 2-4 second-long) MP4 video clips at 576×1024 resolution.
In our local testing, a 14-frame generation took about 30 minutes to create on an Nvidia RTX 3060 graphics card, but users can experiment with running the models much faster on the cloud through services like Hugging Face and Replicate (some of which you may need to pay for).
We’ve previously covered other AI video synthesis methods, including those from Meta, Google, and Adobe.
Stability AI says it is also working on a text-to-video model, which will allow the creation of short video clips using written prompts instead of images.
The original article contains 553 words, the summary contains 187 words. Saved 66%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
I should give this a try, but 30 minutes to generate 14 frames sounds much worse than what I can do currently. Usually a SD gen will take about 15 sec for 1 frame.
Mmmm. I want a cold, refreshing can of Slurge!