I actually tried this myself with DALLE-2 recently, but it had very poor results. I'm atrocious at interior design and constantly make mistakes and bad choices, so I regularly look at subreddits like /r/designmyroom and /r/malelivingspace. I'm looking forward to seeing some good tools in this space. I can imagine a polished product that is actually of the room layout. Imagine if it could even scrape second-hand furniture photos from ebay and TradeMe (in New Zealand) and automatically figure out the size and generate 3D models that you could place in your room (e.g. using SweetHome3D.) That would be extremely useful.
https://www.reddit.com/r/StableDiffusion/comments/xboy90/a_b...
1. Remove all furniture from the room. 2. Add furniture to the empty room.
It sounds like img2img might make it possible to preserve the existing floorplan so that it doesn't change any walls or doors.
I don't have a good enough GPU to play around with this stuff (2019 Macbook Pro), but I should probably spin up an instance on AWS or find an API I can use. This new generation of AI tools is really exciting.
They're probably the only retailer with a big enough range and significant enough global presence for it to work well for users and scale.
I should really start to get familiar with AI and learn how to use things like PyTorch. I'm a bit nervous though, because it feels very different to all the programming that I've been doing for over a decade. I'm using to building CRUD web apps and mobile apps, writing SQL queries, setting up servers on AWS, etc. I'm not very good at math and I don't really understand how neural networks work or which kind of algorithm I should choose, so it feels like learning a whole set of new skills from scratch. But I can probably figure out how to use some off-the-shelf libraries and frameworks and string something together. Maybe this will be my next weekend project.
I don't have money to afford such beautiful furnitures and accessories but still it is so amazing haha
this is the kind of aggressiveness/risk taking that people need to find hits in the new AI business
Still not sure how to interpret this, no matter how I look at it. 100k renders at 1/2 cent each comes out to only $500 total. Someone guessed that he could've meant $0.5 when he said "1/2 cent each", but that comes out to $50k total. Whichever math mistake I was trying to intentionally make, I failed to arrive at $1k. Could it be that his math was correct, but the total number was the one that contained the typo?
Not trying to accuse him of lying, I believe it was a genuine mistake or a typo, but as of now, I am still left not knowing whether the stated number was the one he actually meant or whether his math was wrong.
Sidenote: the actual product is great, and I absolutely dig the idea of it too.
0. https://twitter.com/levelsio/status/1577007745668067328?s=46...
Can I ask what's going on under the hood? My guess is you're using Stable Diffusion with the uploaded picture and a phrase like "in a modern style" for a prompt?