Breakthrough technology captures people’s imagination. This disruption threatens multiple creative industries. A frenzied race begins to achieve future goals that were once unimaginable.
All of these things could be true of OpenAI, but decades ago people were talking about Pixar, the computer graphics pioneer.
groundbreaking
when apple When founder Steve Jobs bought Pixar from George Lucas in 1986, the upstart animation studio was pushing the boundaries of computer-generated imagery.
Although crude by today’s standards, no one had ever seen anything quite like their animated short film, Luxo Jr. Or 1989’s “The Tin Toy,” which won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. (Pixar went on to win 22 more Academy Awards and receive two Best Picture nominations.)
“The Tin Toy” was not only a technological marvel of its time, but also showed that these cold digital pixels could enable heartwarming emotional storytelling. Pixar’s breakthrough inspired a generation of programmers, digital artists, and creators to build the modern computer graphics industry. This also happens to lead to the computing and hardware innovations that made OpenAI possible. Animation powerhouse in 2006 disney Acquired Pixar for $7.4 billion.
ChatGPT has taken the technology world by storm since its launch date in November 2022. After decades of breakthroughs in fundamental AI, such as convolutional neural networks and transformers, the public is finally getting a chance to learn what these advances mean for them. Ta. Reading news articles about the first release of ChatGPT just two years ago feels like stepping into a time machine to a simpler time, like this breathtaking article from the New York Times It will be.
“Hundreds of screenshots of ChatGPT conversations have gone viral on Twitter, and many of its early fans are talking about it in amazing and grand terms, as if it were a mixture of software and wizardry. Masu.”
confusion
The “wow factor” of what Pixar was creating at the time impressed artists, technicians, and filmmakers, but it also signaled disruption. Was the era of hand-drawn animation nearing its end?
In his 1998 book Computer Animation: A Whole New World, Pixar co-founder Ed Catmull told author Rita Street:
“Luxo Jr. shocked the entire industry, all corners of computers and traditional animation. At the time, most traditional artists were afraid of computers. Rather than seeing it as just another tool, they saw computers as a form of automation that could put their jobs at risk.
Something similar happened when OpenAI’s ChatGPT and DALL-E text-to-image generators appeared before creative writers, artists, and journalists, but with an additional wrinkle. This time, this amazing technology not only put their lives at risk, but was trained on their own copyrighted public works. Rather than ignore this and accept it as an inevitable future, many creators have filed lawsuits and taken clever countermeasures against their opponents.
holy grail
Now, OpenAI, like Pixar, plans to continuously and rapidly improve its technology and compete to achieve lofty goals.
Pixar’s engineers and animators recognized the limitations of their technology at the time, but looked to the future of computer graphics. They wanted everything to look real.
In a 1989 New York Times article, Pixar co-founder Alvy Ray Smith wrote about the rise of computer animation and the advances that led to “tin toys”: “We, the people who work in computer graphics, , I knew in the back of my mind that I was going to do this 20 years ago. ”
“Our goal is not to have people say, ‘That’s computer animation,'” he says. “Our goal is photorealism.”
OpenAI’s mission is to enable “artificial general intelligence” (AGI). It is loosely defined as an advanced AI system that not only matches but exceeds humans in any task, and has long been considered the holy grail of machine learning.
OpenAI’s mission page states:
“If successful in creating AGI, this technology could help improve humanity by increasing abundance, accelerating the global economy, and supporting the discovery of new scientific knowledge that changes the limits of what is possible.” .”
It’s clear that OpenAI’s leadership knows that AGI has a long way to go, but they don’t seem impressed with what their technology can do today. Earlier this year, OpenAI CEO and co-founder Sam Altman said:
“ChatGPT is a little embarrassing at best. GPT-4 is the stupidest model you’ll ever have to use again.”
Pixar has been pushing the boundaries of computer graphics technology for decades, but the technology is now so commonplace that consumers don’t think about it much. OpenAI has been exploring AGI for nine years, and the pace of progress has accelerated recently. But one question remains about OpenAI. Is that possible with AGI?