
Why Australia must build its own GenAI storytelling culture
When Sundance vaulted indie filmmakers into the spotlight in the late 1980s, it reshaped cinema and the business around it.
When Sundance vaulted indie filmmakers into the spotlight in the late 1980s, it reshaped cinema and the business around it.
What a year. If it felt like every time you blinked, there was another AI announcement, you’re not alone. From blockbuster acquisitions and record-breaking investments to tools that reshaped how we work, travel, shop, and even think, 2024 was a whirlwind in the world of artificial intelligence.
Can Generative AI be used to create an actual advertising film from scratch?
The AI boom undoubtedly resembles the dot-com bubble but with a difference. Back then, most startups carried the risks, while now, giant AI pioneers are unlikely to go broke. Rather, investors will suffer.
In an era marked by the growing influence of artificial intelligence in the workplace, a provocative assertion from Sam Altman, CEO of Open.AI, really captivates the imagination: can a billion-dollar enterprise be operated by one person using Generative AI?
Opinion: While the jury’s still out on whether the Vision Pro marks a ‘Metaverse Renaissance’ or the dawn of an entirely new chapter, one thing’s clear: Apple’s entry has reignited the conversation about immersive technologies.
Generative AI saw explosive growth in popularity and use in 2023, with changes at the speed of light making it hard to keep up with all the news.
“You won’t lose your job to AI, but you will lose your job to someone who knows AI.”
In Ernest Hemingway’s “The Sun Also Rises,” a character is asked how he went bankrupt. His reply? “Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.” The astounding trajectory of Artificial Intelligence (AI) bears many similarities.