Adobe can create text to vector files... I don't recall which conversation your thinking of. Lemme try a search real quickI seem to recall a conversation about asking AI to create vector files. Boudica I tried to find it in the search bar but was unsuccessful (probably user error). I seem to recall the conversation that We couldn't ask ai to create a vector image, but the originator of the ai file could ask...?
www.signs101.com
What no love for the colorist and the letterer? Time to put up my Dr. Ph Martins and Ames guide. Now for cartoon strips, it could all be the same person though.An interesting parallel is traditional comic book creation. From initial storyboards come "pencils", which then goes to inkers for the final camera-ready art. Each stage involves translation and judgement.

I would argue that the hype is the only thing keeping it from collapsing. It is otherwise at that point. It's already had just about everything (if not everything, even if it was in an unofficial capacity) as it is and I would imagine that it's already training on itself (the collapse that you referencing).The hype is still there to keep investors, but we haven't, and we're not going to see much major improvement until then, which is why so many are concerned that it's all going to collapse.
It's interesting to use for brainstorming and text ideas, but the control necessary does not exist. It's exceptionally hard to reproduce repeatable graphics. It brings to mind what I learned in statistics with the 50-50 90 rule. With the flip of a coin you have a 50-50 chance with a 90% likelihood of being wrong. Each flip of the coin resets the odds. Each graphic and artistic request is a new coin flip and you never quite know what you will get. It's an aggregator. The clamor for the ever elusive AGI is something that doesn't seem possible and will not exist with the current technology. They have scoured the internet, reviewed and been fed countless works with no consideration for copyright issues, and will eventually hit a wall. The idea behind agi is that it will eventually replace human intelligence and be self-operating and thinking, capable of decision making independent from any programming. The amount of data necessary to come even close to that, considering what has already been gobbled up, is just not possible and cannot exist.In the case of the Text to Vector feature in Adobe Illustrator, the function actually works from raster/pixel-based imagery and then automatically auto-traces the result. You get results that aren't very clean. The stuff isn't production ready. And that's just judging the line work.
Generally speaking, so-called AI isn't very good at generating abstract graphics. The various tools do not deliver clean, production-ready elements. At best, the tools are only good for brain-storming/ideation. To me, the AI generation tools feel like using a slot machine. You click a button and don't know what you're going to get -even if you're re-using the same text prompt. It's not predictable. It's not consistent. The results are often riddled with strange errors.
Over the past year I've seen a fairly big increase in the number of customer provided "logos" that were generated by some kind of AI tool. Every one of them has had to be re-drawn in vector form. But not only that, the vectorizing process has been complicated by the visual errors that had to be corrected. On top of that, any lettering generated is bound to be some mystery meat kind of thing that doesn't exactly match existing fonts. Sometimes I've been able to substitute the AI lettering with something close enough. In a couple other cases I've had to vectorize the letters.
I agree, it'll stick around, but as what? Will it stay the course?I have no doubt that it will still be here as too many companies have too much invested into it (why people are getting "AI" Windoze), so to keep from having too much egg on their faces, have to still utilize it. But in the end, it will just be a handful of companies with, maybe even slightly less unique models, which in of itself will make things bland, boring and safe (which companies love). In the end, it'll probably just be auto conversion 2.0 as far as artists are concerned and LSP 2.0 for devs. Brave new world out there.
There was an article I read that said they are going to integrate ads into ai chat responses (although this was in 2024, so I guess they are still working on it, lol).I agree, it'll stick around, but as what? Will it stay the course?
With investments at risk as advancements slow to a crawl, Open AI has already signed deals with Walmart to do in app purchases. Watching ads for CoPilot laptops plug how it can identify products in images and videos is just a little too convenient, Meta being nothing more than a massive AdBot, browsers going deeper down the ad-hole every day, all tied to, and under the guise of AI. This seems to be what happens to everything today, if it can host an ad... It will.
So I have to ask if this will be any different. Will AI technology really advance to be a useful tool some day, or just end up a massive marketing/ shopping machine that chats with you and does poor artwork on the side? Who knows...
That's the big question. There is all this hype, some people are impressed (and for most normies, I can understand it). Now, it does fine when everything works within certain parameters, just like auto conversion of old does. The simpler the original design, the better of a chance that it has of correctly churning out something that could work. Where it doesn't work within those predefined situations is where you get the lackluster results and those lackluster results are still the majority of the case and I don't know if how it's implemented now, that they can be corrected.I agree, it'll stick around, but as what? Will it stay the course?
While serving ads is what we are easily seeing on our end, most of this is about data collection. That is were the real money is. It's being sold to us as some type of convenience, efficiency feature, but it's not really for us. We are not their customers anymore. It's the ones that can use that data. Recall, which they still put back in, has no functional reason to exist for the average end user. Now, for those in the corporate world, I can think of quite a few advantages with having something like that.With investments at risk as advancements slow to a crawl, Open AI has already signed deals with Walmart to do in app purchases. Watching ads for CoPilot laptops plug how it can identify products in images and videos is just a little too convenient, Meta being nothing more than a massive AdBot, browsers going deeper down the ad-hole every day, all tied to, and under the guise of AI. This seems to be what happens to everything today, if it can host an ad... It will.
At the very least, I don't really see this being as exciting after all of the hype truly does die down. It usually is the case when we settle into tech, but I think the hype has been done so much for this, I just see it settle even more so down into ho hum doldrumsSo I have to ask if this will be any different. Will AI technology really advance to be a useful tool some day, or just end up a massive marketing/ shopping machine that chats with you and does poor artwork on the side? Who knows...
MS has already done so. Given how much ads are put into the Windows OS as it is, I cannot imagine a timeline where they hadn't do that.There was an article I read that said they are going to integrate ads into ai chat responses (although this was in 2024, so I guess they are still working on it, lol).
DL Signs said:The hype is still there to keep investors, but we haven't, and we're not going to see much major improvement until then, which is why so many are concerned that it's all going to collapse.
That circular financing is often a sign that the end is near. The chasing of their own tail in a last ditch effort to buy time and try to secure more outside investors. I'm sure most of us were around when the .com bubble popped, and those were small numbers by comparison, if this bubble pops, it'll be devastating to the entire economy. I'm sure the so called AI will still exist when the dust settles, but will most likely be a more realistic version than the current hype is making it out to be, I'm thinking more like the description below that WildWestDesign envisions. And it still won't do vector art...The dozens of circular deals going on between OpenAI, NVidia, Oracle, Microsoft and others (along with some very screwy accounting)
in the end, it will just be a handful of companies with, maybe even slightly less unique models, which in of itself will make things bland, boring and safe (which companies love)
Not quite there with happened happened in 2008. Closer to 2020 though. Unfortunately, that helping was not a good investment in my mind (they rarely are as the same industries seem to always need bailouts).Still, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, NASDAQ, etc. have been propped up a great deal by those "magnificent ten" tech companies. A popped AI bubble could take the DJIA down from its current 48,000 level to less than 30,000.
Not surprising. In my lifetime, there have been 8 bailouts provided by the government for businesses/industries that were considered "too big to fail" (just lifetime, not all are within my memory of having to have dealt with). A lot of crossover in quite a few of those bailouts as to who gets them. I am not a bailout fan of corporations. I don't like the government involved in that type of thing as that usually rife with fraud and bureaucracy (usually they go hand in hand). There is a lot of things that I'm not liking government involved in. In the long run, it always screws the plebs (ironically even the ones that want the bailout, but I digress).The risk being posed to the stock market is beginning to create a "too big to fail" situation. Executives at some of these tech companies are now openly talking about "public-private partnership" to help them reach their goals with AI. Translation: when the bubble pops the tech companies will expect a bail-out from Uncle Sam.