Drew Breunig talking about virtuosity how quickly amazing new developments in the world of AI are becoming, meh.
…virtuosity can only be achieved when the audience can perceive the risks being taken by the performer.
A DJ that walks on stage and hits play is not likely to be perceived as a virtuoso. While a pianist who is able to place their fingers perfectly among a minefield of clearly visible wrong keys is without question a virtuoso. I think this idea carries over to sports as well and can partially explain the decline of many previously popular sports and the rise of video game streaming. We watch the things that we have personally experienced as being difficult. That is essential context to appreciate a performance.
Initially, many AI applications were, surprisingly, embraced as incredible performances. The images generated by DALLe were usually not more impressive than those of professional illustrators. They were instead incredibly impressive because they had been achieved by a computer program. The same goes for video generating AI demos; none of their video clips are aesthetic or narrative achievements. They are impressive because they were generated by software. But even here, the AI is not the virtuoso. The virtuoso are the teams and companies building these models.
We’ve been able to watch this sheen come off very quickly. Generating an image from a chatbot is no longer very impressive to our friends. It is a novelty. And this half-life, the time it takes for a model’s output to become merely novel, is shortening with every release.