Qualcomm Got Me Excited About The Future Of Android, But One Thing Still Bothers Me

Qualcomm flew me out to Snapdragon Summit in Maui this year so it could showcase its latest flagship...

OnePlus Watch 2 Taps Google Wear OS At MWC 2024, But It’s The Battery Life That Wows

The OnePlus Watch 2 is the latest flagship smartwatch available from OnePlus, revealed during the Mobile World Congress...

Best Moments Of MWC 2024 Day 3: A Rendered Rockstar And Smart Athletic Assessments

Although MWC is drawing to a close with just half a day left, there are still plenty of...

Ultrahuman Rings Go ‘Luxury’ In New Rare Series (And The Price May Shock You)

If you’ve ever looked at the decadent phones offered by the likes of Caviar, and felt despondent that...

The Best Implementations Of AI We Saw At MWC 2024

At MWC 2024, and CES before it, AI was obviously a hot topic. Instead of new devices themselves...

The Best Products We Saw At MWC 2024

MWC is one of the world’s largest tech conventions. The mobile-focused event, which is held annually in Barcelona,...

Audeze Maxwell Reigns Supreme At IFA, Earning SlashGear Innovation Award

Sponsored Content. The sponsor may receive a commission on purchases made from links. Audeze is one of the...

SlashGear’s Most Innovative Products Of IFA 2024

Sponsored Content. The sponsor may receive a commission on purchases made from links. We’re in Berlin this week...

4 Exciting Smartphones We Can’t Wait To See At MWC 2024

We may receive a commission on purchases made from links. This year’s MWC Barcelona — Mobile World Congress...

Tecno Megabook T16 Pro Pairs Best-In-Class AI With Impressive Battery Life

Sponsored Content. The sponsor may receive a commission on purchases made from links. In decades past, a laptop...

IFA 2024 Day 4: The Sights And Sounds Of The Trade Show

We may receive a commission on purchases made from links. You see and hear a lot of things...

MWC 2024 Innovation Spotlight: Honor V2 RSR Porsche Design

Sponsored content With the concept of folding smartphones firmly entrenched in the public consciousness, the next level of...

Best Of MWC 2024 Nominee: OnePlus Watch 2

Many announcements were made during MWC Barcelona 2024, and quite a few have caught our attention. One of the...

Best Of MWC 2024 Nominee: Tecno Megabook T16 Pro Ultra

MWC Barcelona, the former Mobile World Congress, is almost in the books for 2024, so it’s time to...

SlashGear’s Best Of IFA 2024

It’s time again to drop in on Berlin to witness IFA on this, the event’s 100th anniversary. As...

Qualcomm’s Fix For Faster 5G, AI And Wi-Fi Could Supercharge Your Next Smartphone

Qualcomm is kicking off its presence at 2024’s Mobile World Congress (MWC) by announcing new network products, including...

Quantum Threats to Blockchain: Analyzing Cryptographic Resilience and Post-Quantum Solutions

The convergence of quantum computing and blockchain technology represents one of the most critical security challenges facing the...

IFA 2024 Day 2: Processing, Power, And Other Cool Features

The second day of IFA 2024 is over, and we were treated to some of the funkier items...

Tecno’s Rollable Phone Concept Points To A Future Where Even Foldables Are Obsolete

Barcelona is playing host to MWC — Mobile World Congress — once again in 2024, and a whole lot...

Best Of MWC 2024 Nominee: HONOR Magic6 Pro

Mobile World Conference 2024 is wrapping up, and SlashGear journalists have been on the ground in Barcelona since...

The One Tech Demo That Will Haunt Me From MWC 2024

AI has the capacity to be truly life-changing. It can potentially turn the art averse into artists, the borderline illiterate into somewhat competent writers, and one day it could even turn a budget-less amateur filmmaker into Sam Raimi. But that’s all still a while away yet. While things like AI images do find their way into the odd professional project, AI art still has tremendous entertainment potential. When it came to entertainment, one company’s on-device AI really stood out at MWC 2024.

Picture the scene: The Vatican buzzes with anticipation as Hulk Hogan, dressed in white attire, stretches out one of his “24-Inch-Pythons” toward The Pope. Clasped in his hand — the same hand that held many a WWF Title — is a cup of yogurt. Grateful, the Pontiff takes a sip from the Hulkster’s yogurt cup. 

While the above scenario may have been fun, you really don’t have to imagine it. Instead you can pump it into MediaTek’s on-device image generator, and you’ll get something close to the scenario I mentioned above.

Not every device can do this; in fact, no other device I entered a prompt as wacky into came close. MediaTek had far and away the best on-device AI image generator at MWC 2024, but unfortunately, I’m not allowed to shout about it on our best-of list. A fact that will haunt me almost as much as that picture of the Hulkster shoving a cup into John Paul II’s mutated AI arm will.

It’s on par with an overactive imagination

If you want the official name of this mind-blowing AI tool, it’s the “SXDL Turbo Demo,” or the “Video Diffusion Demo” depending on where you’re viewing it. The sheer scope of the AI image generator is probably the most impressive thing about it. The fact that it generates as you’re typing, so you’ll see your weird ideas grow and change before your eyes in some kind of twisted slideshow, is the second-best thing about it. It is Stable Diffusion-based, so with the right resources and tuning you could re-create the accuracy, but the on-the-fly generation will be a big miss.

Pro wrestlers visiting the Vatican with dairy products aside, MediaTek’s model is capable of replicating an absurdly wide range of seemingly obscure requests. Another participant managed to conjure up a rendering of The Stig from “Top Gear” riding some kind of fruit around a track. It recreated that perfectly. 

Some of my weirder suggestions included Frank Zappa fighting a saber duel with Kevin Spacey, an obese marmoset playing table tennis with a shoe, and perhaps most weirdly, Kevin Keegan (a former soccer player and manager) impersonating Queen guitarist Brian May.

Every other image generator used that week failed to reproduce even mildly weird requests. They’re great if you’re taking things seriously, and want to see the sun setting behind a castle on a hill or something. But go a bit weird, and request a picture of Ed Sheeran shoving Lego up his nose while watching said sunset, and you’ll just confuse most models. MediaTek’s model loves that sort of nonsense.

Like other image generators, there’s obvious room for improvement

While it is quite possibly the best model I have ever used when it comes to illustrating the weird things that fly through my brain, MediaTek’s model isn’t perfect by any means. It struggles with many things other image-generation tools have trouble with: expect extra limbs, weird and deformed arms, or multiple fingers. Sometimes it gets confused and puts a person you’ve mentioned in a weird spot. We didn’t ask it to dress Hulk Hogan like the pope, for example, he was just supposed to feed the revered religious leader some yogurt.

Although it’s great at generating obscure pop-culture pictures, the more complex you make something, the more likely it is to mess up. This was illustrated when we asked for a picture of an obese marmoset playing table tennis with a shoe. It was doing great until we typed the word shoe, then the model got confused. 

We’d have accepted a shoe appearing in place of a paddle, or a shoe returning the ball from the other side of the table, but there was no shoe involved. The paddle the marmoset was using disappeared, too. Instead, it was just sat there at the edge of the table, all plump and confused.

Despite these apparent shortcomings, plenty of people were desperate to take the device running the SXDL Turbo Demo home with them, myself included. Honestly, I could type random nonsense into that thing all day.


Source: http://www.slashgear.com/1534334/one-tech-demo-that-will-haunt-me-from-mwc-2024/

Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
guest