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15:58
This room has been mute for 2 days. Feel kinda bad about it. Was it something I said? :)
@Wolff yes definitely :D
Wes
Wes
lol!
i actually read your messages but forgot to reply :P
no, sometimes it happens *shrug *
I've seen some (maybe 4-5) questions from programmers who need help to generate something they can feed to their learning algorithm. I don't mind helping but I can't help wondering if I'm helping them to make my profession obsolete. I think that design as we know it will eventually die (like many other crafts before). Maybe we should try to make some money helping tech companies kill it instead of giving it all away for free? :)
Wes
Wes
what was it about? like landscape generation or something?
16:16
We have this guy who wants to be able to read receipts. We've had a few "which font is used for receipts" questions lately and I asked this last one what he needed it for. Didn't ask the others though.
Then we have this one where it's about creating images of 3D objects from all possible angles.
I've seen a few more, but I can't find them right now.
Sometimes when a question seems somewhat strange it's because the OP don't tell what it's used for. We assume "web or print", but it seems that it can also be for training a computer.
Wes
Wes
> I mean, if the input will be scanned physical receipts, shouldn't the training material also be in the same form and not clean digitally generated receipts?
basically by generating the "fake" receipts himself, he will be able to train the program automatically @Wolff
when you train a program you need to have the question (the image that needs to be "interpreted" by the program) and the answer (the plain text equivalent of such image)
normally you need actual material to train ai
but if you can generate the material you are going to use a massive shortcut
because you don't need to scan the receipts, feed them to the program, etc
basically he is writing a program that generates fake receipts, meaning also with faded ink, with poor scan quality, not squared, etc. programmatically
so he can train the program very cheaply
16:31
@Wes OK, that was what I meant. I was just curious about how to give the images the right wear.
Seems like a lot of trouble. The input receipts might come from many different sources in many different "distorted" qualities.
Wes
Wes
yeah you can do that programmatically. there are command line tools that can emulate 90% of photoshop
like image magick
But you need to know what to do.
Wes
Wes
no it's not. it's extremely cheap to actual real data training
@Wolff yes of course, if you write a program that combines all kinds of defect of a receipt, you can generate millions of realistic examples in literally minutes
We've had quite some questions about how to make digitally clean artwork look like it comes from an analogue source. It's not always so easy.
Anyway, isn't this just OCR (as I asked)? Why treat receipts any differently than any other kinds of text?
Wes
Wes
in fact you can generate them as you train the program and verify the training as you generate new ones
depends on what he is doing. but yes. there are AI based OCR i reckon
16:36
The programmer basically needs to convert pixels to text. When he/she has the text it's straightforward to analyze the content from there.
@Wes Isn't it always "AI" based. I mean it's not a well defined phenomenon. Any program which "learns" from inputted data could be said to be an "AI". Or what?
My brother experimented with this in the 90's. The computers have just become faster. :)
Wes
Wes
ocr doesn't normally learn is what i meant. can be improved with ai for sure
@Wes Maybe not when you get your hands on it, but during the production phase the programmers must've "taught" it how to read the text.
Wes
Wes
sure
but afaik ocr is not like ai
Ongoing learning collected from all the users might be the new thing.
Wes
Wes
ai is basically "dumb recognition" while ocr is a well thought set of recognition rules
(i don't actually know how ocr works, i could be wrong)
16:42
As I said, my brother was working on "AI" back in the 90's. They called it "neural networks". I remember watching him training the program by feeding it with lots of very pixelated "hand written" numbers which it tried to read.
Wes
Wes
you could be right
/me googles ocr
I'm not unimpressed with new technology. But I just think talking about "artificial intelligence" is quite a stretch. I would call it "advanced database search". :) But I'm not a programmer - just a hobbyist.
@Wes You also might be right about that.
Wes
Wes
"dumb recognition" is far less efficient but given the speed of modern computers, you can get good results provided enough training data. actual sensible statistical analysis is obviously better but much more complex to implement
ocr doesn't seem to be a one way only to perform the task
there's a variety of techniques that are used
including modern "ai"
Optical character recognition (OCR) – targets typewritten text, one glyph or character at a time.
Optical word recognition – targets typewritten text, one word at a time (for languages that use a space as a word divider). (Usually just called "OCR".)
Intelligent character recognition (ICR) – also targets handwritten printscript or cursive text one glyph or character at a time, usually involving machine learning.
Intelligent word recognition (IWR) – also targets handwritten printscript or cursive text, one word at a time. This is especially useful for languages where glyphs are not separated
anyway regarding feeding the training data automatically. that's genius, because you can get the program to learn indefinitely until the program itself is happy with its own performances :P
17:01
@Wes Yes, I understand and I think it's smart. But I can also imagine a sci-fi movie showing how humans weren't able to predict every single case beforehand. :)
Wes
Wes
1- if you wrote actual algorithms manually not necessarily you would catch that single case :D
2- therefore needs to be just as good as if you wrote the algorithms manually :P
and that's entirely possible
speaking of which, that is probably how our own brain works. there is no design. only "previous experiences" and the ability of recognizing them
18:04
@Wolff weekends happen ^^
Happy Monday room
@Wes did you figure out your opacity masks stuff?
Wes
Wes
i am still dubious on the reason it works like that.
i mean it's not wrong, i just find it odd. but my opinion might be biased by the experience on other programs
I'm still not fully sure I get what you were trying to do
You can apply to groups if I recall correctly
I never used those much since I mostly worked in layout, but I used to give an assignment in an introductory course to AI where they were useful. The students had to create an illustration of a tropical fish, based on an existing photograph
It was a fun assignment, daunting at first though
Wes
Wes
essentially i wanted the opacity value to be functioning also in the opacity layer/mask itself
but it's not something i cannot do, i can set the path to "screen" and have that
people keep telling me i am in the wrong career. i am normally a programmer
18:37
@Wes Well that's a cool thing :)
@Wes You're in the wrong career if you don't like what you're doing.
Wes
Wes
i like way too many things
Otherwise, being a multipotentialite isn't a bad thing
@Wes Oh I can totally relate to that :)
Wes
Wes
or rather, i like doing always new things
wait that didn't translate well... i like new challenges
Same for me, the problem is sometimes getting things finished without being sidetracked by another new shiny thing
Wes
Wes
yeah :D
 
1 hour later…
19:56
@Emilie I feel the same way. Maybe graphic design isn't such a bad choice for people with "too many talents". It is a very broad profession.
Wes
Wes
for me it's "too many only barely decent talents" :P
@Wolff Or even if you feel restricted, you can still find a nook to fit in somewhere
@Wes Uargh it's the story of my life. I've always been "promising" in many fields, but never really exceptional at one thing.
Wes
Wes
same
Like sometimes less creative students will be able to apply systems more consistently (e.g. layout, brand guidelines, etc.)
20:01
@Emilie True. A third parameter can be the ability to socialize.
@Wolff Client management lol
@Emilie Yeah and plain old salesmanship.
(not what I'm best at)
There was one exercise I gave once that was really revealing. I think I stole it from The Education of a Graphic Designer... Basically, works were being presented by students other than the ones who actually created them
I had one student specifically, she could argue every choice the original student had made and she was really convincing at it too
It was uncanny that the student himself hadn't even put that much thought in his choices (from his own admission afterwards)
Oh, I think I've tried something similar. It's not only about selling, but also about analyzing a project objectively.
The uncanny thing is that people without a care in the world often are able to sell themselves better than the more thoughtful and worried type (who might be "better").
@Wolff Thoughtful + worried = forced into humility maybe :)
20:31
@Emilie Yeah. I don't know if I'm humble, but I sometimes feel run over by people with no skills, no consciousness regarding the craft, cool clothes and lots of "friends". :)
@Wolff Well I think the good part is that the work typically speaks for itself, so talented folks can still find each other even if they're not being as vocal about it than others :)
It's sort of like all those discussions of designers who rant about fiverr and stuff...would you really want those clients anyways
at that moment, those people are not ready to pay for more than basic design services, and that's ok
someone needs to take care of the ephemeral stuff anyways
@Emilie Nice of you to put it that way. :)
You still sort of need to get your stuff out there...At least nowadays it's sort of easier to share
Word-of-mouth too...
That's the thing. I think my humility/modesty lies in not wanting to do mediocre stuff. Maybe I'm too much of a perfectionist. You see so many people online who are just spewing out designs with nice finish, following the latest trend. I could easily copy it (like they do), but I don't want to! It's not cool, you know?
20:48
@Wolff Well the challenge also comes with actually doing it for a client...
A lot of people design incredibly cool things when not bogged down by a variety of constraints, but is it design?
@Emilie When I started out (ten years ago) I was very quick to criticize every design I came across. Today I know that every job comes with many constraints and compromises. The design might be mediocre, but the designer could be very skilled to be able to achieve that under the given circumstances.
@Wolff Yep
I was having a chat with someone from UX recently about ethics
We have a packaging class for which we have an environmental component that I've updated recently
and the amount of "innovative" packaging design that gets showcased on blogs for being sustainable is really disheartening
How do you mean?
(I'm not sure what it means for a class to have an environmental component)
@Wolff Like when we teach packaging design, we try to touch on how to design in ways that are more responsible for the environment
reduction of materials used, making things reusable, etc.
since packaging is one of the more wasteful areas
Ah. Well there so much "hot air" when it comes to doing something for the environment.
20:55
re: the link above...those pearls were all over the place back in those days
Never seen them before
Is it disheartening because it's so hi-tech and out of reach? Or am I misunderstanding?
I'm mostly concerned that they get publicity but they seem to sort of be riding the wave of looking cool
like what about transportation...safety
who drinks just one sip of water?? :P
labeling?
Maybe I can use the same process on vodka? :P
Some of it is cool, but a lot of it is just wind...
Oh, where to start. Everything about global warming is depressing. It concerns me deeply (for many years - it's not a new thing), but what people are doing right now is trying to find out which product to buy so they can get their indulgence.
21:00
Oh and by ".those pearls were all over the place back in those days", I meant getting online publicity from blogs saying how cool it is there's no packaging
Lol.
Talking about getting interested by anything new and shiny
I made a bowl out of mycellium maybe 2 years ago
When we produce print we work on doing it as environmental as possible, but clients seem to forget that it would be even better for the environment if they didn't produce anything at all.
@Emilie It's used in molecular gastronomy right? Think I've seen it before.
Bubble tea!
You can take molds, fill it with waste product that mushrooms enjoy (not too acidic) and the thing will grow
@Wolff Might be, not sure
I've dabbled in molecular gastronomy (that too lol...) but it was more about spherification back in those days
@Emilie Just googled it, no that wasn't what I thought it was. This looks all thready.
21:03
I haven't updated myself since then
I wouldn't eat it lol
@Emilie I thought that was what you meant.
it's the state before mushrooms
Like mushroom roots?
@Wolff yep!
it has really cool properties too
For packaging?
21:05
anti-fire (whatever the word is), super light, sturdy, biodegrable
Let's produce billions of those and save the world
I think IKEA said they'd switch their (eeeeh what's the word?) polystrene(?) to this mycellium stuff
@Wolff lol maybe not but it seems like something worth considering
In Denmark we have this conception of ourselves as being very good at reducing CO2 (and the smartest and friendliest and happiest etc.). But we seem to forget that we don't really produce our own goods anymore :)
@Wolff I don't think that perception is limited to yourselves, I think a lot of the world holds Danemark in high esteem
Well, it seems a little bit hollow.
21:10
Does anyone ever really produce all of their own goods anymore?
China?
@Wolff I think my province exports a ton of chicken to China...would need to double check that though
A new way of sorting our garbage was introduced not very long ago. Among other things it means that food must be separated to produce biogas.
My kid is up, will check chat later :)
Nice talking to you!
But the problem is, that a part of our heat comes from burning garbage.
OK, bye.
 
1 hour later…
22:21
What are you mods thinking related to the big chain of moderators stepping down in light of SE's policies? @Emilie @DᴀʀᴛʜVᴀᴅᴇʀ @Ryan @PieBie @Wrzlprmft?
 
1 hour later…
23:48
@ZachSaucier I'll reply later when the kids are in bed. Are you looking for something specific? Because we're not free to share specifics. There isn't a whole lot that can be said over what's already being written on moderator resignations all over the network
Just curious about your thoughts & if any mods on GD are considering stepping down.

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