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Those doodles you drew have now been used to teach Google’s AI how to draw. The resulting program is called Sketch-RNN and, frankly, it draws about as well as a toddler.
The user is tasked with drawing a wide range of doodles, for example, a snake, shoe, or elbow. The neural network powering Quick, Draw! attempts to predict what you are drawing.
That’s a win-win. On Monday, March 16, the Kennedy Center launched “Lunch Doodles with Mo Willems,” a new series that provides kids with an afternoon dose of education and creativity.
Kill two minutes and teach Google’s AI to recognize doodles on its new Quick, Draw! site. Christina Bonnington Updated on May 25 2021 1:38 pm CDT Screengrab via Google ...
It's free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now! The neural network was fed a healthy diet of 10,000 tallywhacker doodles to acquire this impressive skill.
Take doodles, not photographs, with this AI-powered camera. It uses Google’s neural networks and doodle data to scan for objects and print out cartoons of what it sees. Created by Dan Macnish.
With that pun off of our chest, Zynga announced that Draw Something, the mobile social doodle game that's gone like gangbusters, has accrued 50 million downloads since it launched 50 days ago.