Text-to-Video
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- Written by: Super User
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Where to see demos of Sora Videos + prompts for Sora?
Click on the thumbnail above for 12 samples video created with Sora.
Sora, the text-to-video model (not the character of Kingdom heart), is the big news of the moment in the text generation AI world.
For some reasons, Sora attracted more attention than Google's VideoPoet, another text2video project, that is pretty impressive too and that was just released maybe 10 days before Sora.
Read more: Where to see demos of Sora Videos + prompts for Sora?
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- Written by: Super User
- Category: Text-to-Video
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(Intermediate level of difficulty)
If you have read the previous post about online services to use AnimateDiff and create short animations videos or GIFs by just writting a couple of sentences. You have probably noticed that these links redirects to differents kind of interfaces and functions.
Read more: DiffEx part 1: a convenient gui for AnimateDiff-cli-prompt-travel to generate AI videos
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- Written by: Super User
- Category: Text-to-Video
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The original post is here.
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- Written by: Super User
- Category: Text-to-Video
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This post is a part of the serie of posts related to AnimateDiff, this tool that can animate pictures created by AI diffusion models.
The next post of the serie was supposed to be about DiffEx, but i have decided to postpone this article, since i know that the author of the software will release a new version of the software very soon.
But you don't need to run AnimateDiff locally, if you don't have a powerful graphic card...
Read more: Create AI based animated characters online with AnimateDiff
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- Written by: Super User
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AnimateDiff is a solution to animate pictures that is available for different interfaces.
It is a tool that allows to animate a picture that has been created in an AI environment and it can be used in different ways.
Before I wrote this tutorial, I wanted to compare AnimateDiff for Automatic1111 with DiffEx, a standalone interface to use AnimateDiff that is also able to do picture generation.
I wanted to say that DiffEx is much more convenient to use, but by trying to reproduce in one software what I was doing with the other, I noticed that their fonctions don't match exactly.
Also my own comprehension of Automatic1111, DiffEx and AnimateDiff is limited, I said it modestly.
AnimateDiff seem to be something to experiment with, instead something you have to be too theoretical about.