When OpenAI released CLIP, the Roboflow team built an AI Pictionary game called paint.wtf. Players were given a prompt like “a giraffe in the arctic,” and players drew depictions. CLIP judged which image embedding most closely matched the text embedding. Over 120,000 players played in the first week, peaking at 7 submissions per second.
Fast forward, and multimodality apps are ready. Come learn the trials (strangers on the internet submitting drawings) and successes (infra scaled without outage) of building with foundation models.
Recorded live in San Francisco at the AI Engineer Summit 2023. See the full schedule of talks at ai.engineer/summit/schedule & join us at the AI Engineer World's Fair in 2024! Get your tickets today at ai.engineer/worlds-fair
About Joseph Nelson
Joseph is Co-founder/CEO at Roboflow, which makes tools over 250,000 developers use to build better computer vision models, faster. Roboflow is backed by Y Combinator, Craft Ventures, Floodgate, the founders of OpenAI, among others. He previously Co-founded and sold an NLP company that sorted the US Congress's mail and worked at Facebook. Joseph learned to code writing programs for TI-84 calculators.
Негізгі бет Ғылым және технология 120k players in a week: Lessons from the first viral CLIP app: Joseph Nelson
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